Insurance, fieldwork safety, international healthcare, crisis management - and the many other issues universities face when they send people abroad - will be examined at a major conference next week.
āEducation Without Borders: Students and Staff in a High-risk Worldā, organised by McMillan Cooper, a firm which specialises in events on travel risk, at the Bridgewater Hall in Manchester on 21 October.
Michael Smith, safety policy adviser at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, will consider āthe challenges of academic research in high-risk areasā. Perhaps the key to success is āthe support of a good insurer and buy-in from senior management, and I mean right at the topā. Yet there were also a number of questions it is always worth asking.
One of them, Mr Smith will argue, is āWho authorises the work?ā, since āa senior academic who wants the work done is likely to accept a higher risk than a senior administrator who may have little idea about the research but possibly understands the travel location risks more clearlyā.
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Equally crucial is āDo they actually need to go?ā In the case of group trips as part of taught courses, Mr Smith is often sceptical āwhether an appropriate risk assessment has been carried out, because the principle of substitution is likely to generally mean that the trip should take place at a lower-risk locationā.
He will recall the case of an academic who āattempt[ed] to go to a high-risk region to attend a conference, which could easily have been held by video-linkā. And he will also suggest that risky assignments can only be justified for āresearch-centredā reasons, and not simply in order āto make the student more employable when they have finished the courseā.
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Meanwhile, former BBC reporter and producer Alistair Macdonald (now a consultant and fellow of the Royal Geographical Society) will remind delegates that āaccidents and deaths occur regularly when students, research graduates or academic staff work in remote parts of the worldā.
If such things happen, universities wanting to avoid āserious reputational damageā urgently needed to learn how to āwork with journalistsā, since the news cycle often includes a āmanhunt phaseā where the goal is finding someone to blame.
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