BRICS countries, a grouping of emerging economies, agreed to facilitate the recognition of academic qualifications among members to ensure the mobility of skilled professionals, academics and students.
This emerged during a summit held from 22-24 August 2023 in Sandton, Johannesburg, South Africa. The group consists of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. The theme of the 15th summit was ‘BRICS and Africa: Partnership for mutually accelerated growth, sustainable development and inclusive multilateralism’.
BRICS countries are perceived as seeking to bolster their geopolitical power to counter the often US-led West on economic and political issues. The bloc also agreed to grant membership to six other countries: Argentina, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates from 1 January 2024.
Chinese President Xi Jinping, Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa attended the summit in person, while Russia’s President, Vladimir Putin, participated virtually after an International Criminal Court arrest warrant for him over the war in Ukraine complicated his travelling to South Africa.
Following the meeting, the group issued a declaration touching on educational, political, economic, security and cultural matters.
“We support the principle of facilitating mutual recognition of academic qualifications among BRICS countries to ensure the mobility of skilled professionals, academics and students and recognition of qualifications obtained in each other’s countries, subject to compliance with applicable domestic laws,” according to the Johannesburg II Declaration.
“We welcome concrete proposals made during the 10th meeting of BRICS Ministers of Education focusing on critical areas in education and training such as entrepreneurship development, skills for the changing world, out-of-school youth, climate change, labour market intelligence, early childhood development and university global ranking.”
TVET embraced
The document states that the member countries “appreciate the progress on education and technical and vocational education and training (TVET) cooperation, in particular, the operationalisation of the BRICS TVET Cooperation Alliance which focuses on strengthening communication and dialogue and early finalisation of the Charter of the BRICS TVET Cooperation Alliance thereby promoting substantial cooperation in TVET, integrating TVET with industry”.
The countries also committed themselves to strengthening skills exchanges and cooperation. They said they were embracing digital transformation in education and TVET as each BRICS country is domestically committed to ensuring education accessibility and equity and promoting the development of quality education.
The declaration said the countries recognise the value of the BRICS Academic Forum as a platform for deliberations and discussions that had resulted in BRICS academics leading on issues confronting members of the bloc.
This year, the academic forum met in Cape Town, South Africa, from 14-18 May and the event took the form of a conference in which academics and researchers presented their research in various sessions. Last week’s summit also noted that the BRICS Think Tanks Council is celebrating 10 years of enhancing cooperation in research and capacity-building among the academic communities of BRICS countries.
The BRICS Academic Forum was established in 2009 while the BRICS Think Tanks Council was initiated in 2013 to enhance cooperation in research and capacity-building among academic communities of BRICS countries. The forum and think tank hold their meetings annually under the respective BRICS chairships.
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