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UWI moves to end royal charter, redefine regional role

by Ricardo Roberts
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The University of the West Indies is preparing to sever its constitutional ties to the British monarchy and reposition itself as a fully sovereign regional institution, in a move its leadership says will secure its legal independence and deepen its global reach.

The UWI to terminate its Royal Charter that dates back to 1948 and transition into a fully independent regional entity embedded within the Treaty of Chaguaramas, CARICOMโ€™s constitution, said vice-chancellor Professor Sir Hilary Beckles.

CARICOM leaders had already approved the request to terminate the Royal Charter, he noted. The new structure will define UWI as an โ€œindependent regional university foreverโ€, protected by intergovernmental treaty rather than colonial decree, he declared.

But despite moves to tie UWI to the CARICOM intergovernmental system, funding from regional governments has shrunk from two-thirds to less than half of the 77-year-old universityโ€™s budget.

The university was one of the earliest postwar actions by the British government to address poverty and underdevelopment that were laid bare in the civil unrest that swept the British West Indies in the mid-to-late 1930s. Created as the University College of the West Indies, a constituent college of the University of London, its first chancellor was Princess Alice, Countess of Athlone.

In his annual report, he detailed the universityโ€™s shift from its colonial origins towards a future defined by โ€œreparatory justiceโ€ and โ€œintellectual liberationโ€. The move would effectively end the role of the British monarch as the universityโ€™s โ€œvisitorโ€, repatriating legal authority to the Caribbean.

Only four of the former British colonies in the 15-nation Caribbean Community are republics, two of which are home to UWI campuses โ€“ Barbados and Trinidad and Tobago. Of the seven Commonwealth realms where King Charles III is head of state, Jamaica โ€” where the university was founded โ€” and Antigua and Barbuda are home to the other two UWI campuses.

The prominent Caribbean historian and academic argued: โ€œWe have the power to give degrees compliments of the King of England. If the King of England woke up one morning and said: โ€˜Well, Iโ€™m revoking that charter,โ€™ then the UWI would not exist. It would be abolished in a stroke.โ€

In a separate development, Sir Hilary also announced that UWI has secured a US$100 000 ($200 000) investment from the Caracas-based CAF, the Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean.

This funding is earmarked for a sweeping linguistic expansion, enabling the university to subtitle its digital content and train internal teams to produce original programming in Spanish.

The investment aligns with a now fully operational policy mandating that โ€œno student shall graduate from the University of the West Indies without proficiency in a non-English languageโ€, said Sir Hilary.

Rejecting the notion of regional isolation, he said the Caribbean was one of the โ€œmost globally penetrated civilisations in the worldโ€, and the university must prepare its students to navigate this reality.

The report highlighted UWIโ€™s rise from what was once described as an โ€œintellectual ghettoโ€ to being ranked among the top 3.6 per cent of universities worldwide by Times Higher Education.

Sir Hilary, a long-time leader of the Caribbean movement for reparations for the transatlantic slave trade, challenged the global academic community to rethink the definition of โ€œexcellenceโ€, specifically calling out institutions built on the profits of slavery and genocide.

โ€œThe question we are debating around the worldโ€ฆ is it possible to be excellent if you are unethical? UWI is an intergenerational enterprise of liberation. We are on the other side of that paradigm.โ€

Despite UWIโ€™s global prestige, the university was operating in a โ€œfiscally challenged environmentโ€, the vice chancellor said. He noted a significant shift in funding: while student enrolment has grown from 30 000 to nearly 50 000 over recent decades, government contributions to the operational budget have slipped from 68 per cent to 48 per cent.

To combat this, the university has aggressively reduced administrative costs โ€” now under ten per cent of the budget โ€” and increased its focus on generating external revenue.

โ€œWe do not allow our university to shrink down to fit our pocket,โ€ Sir Hilary said. โ€œWe could comfortably manage this university with 20 000 students and a balanced budgetโ€ฆ but how would that help the people? How would that help the region?โ€

Looking ahead, the vice-chancellor positioned UWI as the โ€œhub of the Caribbean futureโ€, particularly in relation to the AI revolution and digital transformation.

Sir Hilary identified the next phase of the universityโ€™s strategic plan as a pivot towards modern technology.

โ€œThe vision at this final stage of our strategic plan is to lead our university into the heart and the centre of the AI revolution and the digital transformation of economies and societies.โ€

Aided by a US$80m grant from the Saudi Development Fund, Sir Hilary said the Five Islands campus in Antigua is set for a total transformation.

โ€œThis time next year we probably will not recognise that spaceโ€ฆ itโ€™s the campus that has now the largest external injection of funds.โ€

UWI has also signalled its entry into the Indian subcontinent, marking a significant milestone in its โ€œaggressiveโ€ global expansion strategy, said Sir Hilary.

The move is part of a broader effort to embed the Caribbean institution in global hubs of technology and research. While specific details of the Indian facility remain under wraps, Sir Hilary confirmed the agreement was finalised today, following groundwork laid by Pro Vice-Chancellor and Principal of the Cave Hill campus, Professor Clive Landis.

Sir Hilary emphasised that the mission of the university remains a โ€œcauseโ€ rather than a job.

โ€œOur feet are planted on the ground while our eyes look to the skies. Thatโ€™s a dialectical relationship that attracts the finest thinkingโ€”doing more with less.โ€

(RR)

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