In line with the Commission's initiative to modernise European universities, the first European University/Business Forum took place on 28-29 February 2008. It brought together representatives of higher education, business and both national and EU-level politicians.
Under discussion were the modernisation of university governance structures with help from businesses; curricular changes targeting greater employability and a more entrepreneurial mind-set among graduates; academic mobility; and lifelong education and retraining.
Changes in how the academic world operates have already been introduced in some countries, but stakeholders agree that every mindset cannot be changed overnight, admitting that it will take time before even the most traditional European systems have been modernised to correspond to new societal needs.
"The Lisbon agenda will not be delivered by this generation, but by the next one," stressed Professor Alan Barrel from the University of Cambridge.
He explained that the academic world needs time to create a new mindset before all EU universities can fully embrace the ideas of co-operation with business. Furthermore, it will take time for "bottom-up grassroots changes" to happen and contribute to creativity and innovation.
Thus far, French plans to implement EU recommendations on higher education reform have attracted opposition from students, university staff and the French association of researchers. All fear that state disengagement could lead to excessive private-sector influence over higher education curricula and unequal development of universities.





