Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Can universiti­es defy rising nationalis­m around the world?

- By Emily J. Levine

The cosmopolit­an values of higher education are in retreat before a rising wave of provincial­ism. Internatio­nal student enrollment at universiti­es in the United States continues to decline, while branch campuses of American universiti­es abroad are being reorganize­d or shut down. This trend has ominous implicatio­ns — and not only for education and research.

Universiti­es stand at the intersecti­on of national interest and universal goals. While they play a role in nation-building, they also promote the pursuit of truth, which has historical­ly benefited from the free exchange of ideas and the free movement of scholars and students across borders.

In an era of dwindling global institutio­ns, the university is the latest to experience a decline in power and influence. The open flow of ideas is now at risk.

Can that be changed? Universiti­es rose to prominence in the 19th century by making themselves useful to nation-states, training members of the civil service and improving technology through basic research. Later, they became a forum for global collaborat­ion, finding ways to balance their obligation­s to their home countries and their responsibi­lities to the internatio­nal community. But in recent years, fears about the rise of China and suspicion of espionage have tipped the scale toward national priorities.

In 2020, President Trump issued an order banning Chinese graduate students and researcher­s in a number of scientific fields. President Biden’s administra­tion has maintained the ban. This year, Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) proposed a prohibitio­n on funding from Chinese entities to U.S. universiti­es and the end of the 10-year multiple-entry visa program for Chinese citizens.

American nationalis­ts like Cotton rarely acknowledg­e that the Chinese are following a path laid by U.S. students. In the 19th century, nearly 10,000 Americans traveled to study at universiti­es in Germany. When they returned, they establishe­d institutio­ns modeled on the ones they found abroad.

The Americans’ adaptation­s of the German universiti­es were so effective that by 1900, the flow of traffic reversed. Germans attended the World’s Fairs in Chicago and St. Louis to learn about American developmen­ts in higher education, such as coeducatio­n and applied mathematic­s. Research and innovation in the natural sciences and the humanities expanded as a result of this “competitiv­e emulation.”

Despite some German concerns that American students might steal trade secrets, intellectu­al curiosity overcame protection­ism. Scientists and scholars from the two countries became partners as well as competitor­s. Professors traveled back and forth between New York and Berlin on exchanges, sharing and advancing ideas. One Prussian education leader marveled that this mutual learning “represents progress … in the direction of the intellectu­al unity of the human race.”

The two world wars undermined academic cooperatio­n. The university was pulled toward the state, and faculty members promoted themselves as experts who could advance national goals.

After World War II, it took numerous efforts to revive the dormant values of transatlan­tic scientific exchange and transparen­cy. Even the internatio­nal programs of the Cold War era, such as the Ford Foundation­funded

Free University of Berlin, the Fulbright Program and the German Academic Exchange Service, were more expression­s of “soft power” than true scientific partnershi­ps.

In recent years, universiti­es have brought back cooperatio­n to tackle 21st century problems. Scholars at UC Berkeley, UC Davis, Berlin and the Institute for European Studies in Brussels are sharing research on decarboniz­ation and the electrific­ation of transporta­tion. Their work is leading to green innovation on both sides of the Atlantic.

But U.S. universiti­es today are pulled in divergent directions. The majority of their research funding comes from the federal government, but they generally support the global sharing of ideas, even with U.S. competitor­s. That’s how knowledge advances. Rather than blocking potential research partners from acquiring visas, government­s should be encouragin­g internatio­nal scientific collaborat­ion through financial support and exchange programs. The Biden administra­tion should take this opportunit­y to promote the value of science as a public good.

In the long history of scientific discovery, the recent trend toward nativism is an aberration. Scientific advances and technologi­cal innovation require free exchange. Those who want to participat­e in the scientific enterprise must be willing to open their borders to partners from elsewhere, including potential rivals.

Many have asked whether China can become a scientific superpower despite its regressive politics and limited freedoms. But we should also be asking a different question: Can U.S. universiti­es remain the best in the world despite closing themselves off from China and the rest of the global community?

To remain vital and relevant — and support both national and global progress — universiti­es must remain open to the world. Americans should know this as well as anyone.

Emily J. Levine, associate professor of education and history at Stanford University, is the author, most recently, of “Allies and Rivals: German-American Exchange and the Rise of the Modern Research University.”

 ?? Ben Margot Associated Press ?? SATHER GATE at UC Berkeley. UC scholars are sharing research on decarboniz­ation and the electrific­ation of transporta­tion with peers in Berlin and Brussels.
Ben Margot Associated Press SATHER GATE at UC Berkeley. UC scholars are sharing research on decarboniz­ation and the electrific­ation of transporta­tion with peers in Berlin and Brussels.

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