The ENLIGHT consortium of nine European universities, including NUI Galway, has been selected in the framework of the second call for 'European Universities', the European Commission's pilot program for new multilateral networks.

ENLIGHT, the European university Network to promote equitable quality of life, sustainability and global engagement through higher education transformation and will receive startup funding of €5 million.

ENLIGHT unites nine universities of Galway; the Basque country, Spain; Bordeaux, France; Bratislava, Slovakia; Göttingen, Germany; Groningen, the Netherlands; Tartu, Estonia; Uppsala, Sweden; and Ghent, Belgium.

Major, complex societal challenges

The nine ENLIGHT universities have set a common goal to fundamentally transform higher education and to empower existing and prospective students with the right knowledge and skills to become engaged professionals and respond to the major, complex societal challenges of the 21st century.

The ENLIGHT network embodies the geographical, cultural and linguistic diversity of Europe, and aims to make full use of this wealth and diversity to offer new, flexible international study opportunities tailored to individual’s needs.

NUI Galway president, Professor Ciarán Ó hÓgartaigh, said: “NUI Galway is delighted to further its work with the ENLIGHT consortium.  All nine universities are based outside of capital cities and therefore have a particular perspective on the world.

"Together, we are regional drivers of development, working closely with our cities to tackle societal challenges and see international ambition as a means of maximising regional impact. 

"At NUI Galway, we serve our region best – and respect it – by being open to highest standards of excellence and co-operation.  We will benefit from this funding as the consortium will learn collectively to address shared challenges consistent with our values as a university community.”

The ENLIGHT universities aim to create new learning formats in which students focus on real social needs together with researchers, citizens and companies.

In addition, students will not only given the opportunity to sharpen their knowledge with advanced research, but will also be stimulated to look beyond the boundaries of their own discipline, to think innovatively, work together, deal with diversity and to broaden their horizons within and outside Europe.

Need for international co-operation

Vice-president international at NUI Galway, Professor Becky Whay, said: “The current pandemic has highlighted the need for international co-operation to tackle global problems, and with our ENLIGHT partners, we are committed to tackling barriers to education that may emerge. 

"We hope that receiving this funding at this time will prove a watershed moment for us to work towards more inclusive internationalisation through online co-operation to tackle shared challenges.” 

Over the next three years, ENLIGHT will pilot new learning formats across five focus themes: climate change; health and wellbeing; inequalities; digital revolution; energy and circularity.

In the long term ENLIGHT wants to create an open space between the nine universities without barriers for learning, teaching and working together.

The ENLIGHT project was realised in close co-operation with the student representatives of all ENLIGHT universities, with the student network continuing to play a central role in addressing the needs of current and future student generations.

More information on ENLIGHT is available at https://enlight-eu.org.