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In exile no more, Central European University puts down new roots

Rector Shalini Randeria wants displaced institution to broaden appeal at home in Vienna and for international student cohort

November 17, 2021
Shalini Randeria
Source: CEU/Zsolt Marton

The Central European University has been a bastion for democracy for three decades, but in recent years it was best known as a punchbag for the increasingly illiberal regime of Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán.

It was Mr Orbán’s 2017 higher education law?that forced CEU to move most of its activities from Budapest to Vienna where, following the turbulent tenure of Michael Ignatieff as president and rector, Shalini Randeria has taken the helm.

Professor Randeria, a?US-born Indian researcher who started her career at CEU in 2002 as founding director?of the?department?of?sociology and social anthropology, said that the Orbán government had created “legal uncertainty and insecurity for CEU, through completely arbitrary and ad hoc decision-making”.

Here, she saw an “uncanniness” in the parallels between aspects of?her academic work?and the troubles the institution has faced.

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“I worked for almost 30 years as an anthropologist-sociologist in India on questions of forced displacement and I’ve ended up leading a university which is forcibly displaced,” she said.

“Every forced displacement comes with enormous costs,” she?added, referring to the emotional and social?price paid?by?CEU’s?staff and students?as a result of the relocation,?including?having to move children to new schools,?leaving parents behind,?and having to?get acquainted with?a?new language.?“The question is, then; can we turn this to an opportunity for ourselves?”

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This is the central challenge facing Professor Randeria, who was previously rector of Vienna’s Institute for Human Sciences and professor of social anthropology and sociology at the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies in Geneva.

Student protest, Budapest, Hungary 2019
Source:?
Getty

One of the most pressing tasks in the coming six months is to oversee the design of a new, permanent home for CEU’s roughly 2,000 students on the western edge of Vienna; the speed of the evacuation from Budapest means that the university has taught out of a rented, converted office space in the city centre since September 2019.

But that new?home?needs careful?refurbishment. The site?hosts?an “extremely visionary” former?psychiatric hospital, laid out across?pavilions?in the 1900s,?but?which?between 1940-45?was the scene of the torture and killing of?789 children?as part of the?Nazi-led?euthanasia programme.

CEU wants its new campus to preserve the hospital’s architecture, continue to memorialise its victims and be carbon neutral.?“It's a triple project if you?like,”?said Professor Randeria, referring to the balancing act.

“We have, fortunately,?two groups of faculty members working on the carbon neutral campus from our environmental studies faculty and a group working on heritage and conservation and memorialisation.”?

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At CEU’s foundation in 1991 by the investor and philanthropist George Soros, its intended intake was students from the newly democratic?countries of?central and eastern?Europe, attracting budding scholars from across the continent and those who saw it as a stepping stone to the best universities in the US and UK.

In the past decade, Professor Randeria noted, “the student body has diversified considerably.?Our students come?from?100 countries;?two-thirds of?our incoming students this year?are from outside the European Union.”

Professor?Randeria?saw her own academic career, which began in Delhi as the fourth generation of women in her family to graduate from university, as?a useful vantage point?from which to rethink CEU’s offering to students, such as those?from the Global South.?

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“The question is how to?redesign?our own curriculum?and?to mirror this diversity of the student body in the faculty, [and] how to rethink some of our courses?to cater to the interests and needs of this very different?cosmopolitan?student body from the one that the university was originally addressing,” she said.

As well as?serving a?global intake,?Professor?Randeria?also wants CEU’s?academic?offering to?attract locals in its?new home “so we can become a?global?university not only in Austria but also for Austrian students”.?

While she wanted to speak more with CEU’s staff and students “to crystallise ideas and to build a consensus” around the final form a simultaneously global and local CEU?will take, she was certain that the institution was ready for a fresh start.??

“We’re not a university in exile; we’re here to stay,” she said. “We will build?a new?campus?in Vienna. Then one question will be the academic profile of the university in its new home, because it should be tailored, also, to this new location.”

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ben.upton@timeshighereducation.com

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline:?CEU ‘here?to stay’?in Vienna

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Reader's comments (1)

It sounds a bit like Trinity College, Dublin in 1916, when it closed its big gate during the Easter Rising.

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