The implementation of gender segregation at Kuwaitâs public university is another blow to gender equality in the oil-rich state, some experts believe.
Male and female students at Kuwait University will be taught separately after the countryâs parliament voted to enforce a 1996 law. Student groups and some academics have expressed opposition to the move.
Mohammad AlMutairi, a research associate at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington, that the policy would affect how young Kuwaitis looked at equality, inclusivity and cultural identity.
With protests from students and pushback from some academics, Mr AlMutairi said, Kuwait University faced the âchallenge of upholding tradition while adapting to changing student expectationsâ.
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Manar Sabry, senior assistant director of strategic analysis at Binghamton University in the US, said some Kuwait University faculty had raised concerns about the autonomy of the institution, particularly around governmental decisions and interference.
âSome connect decisions, such as those regarding gender separation, to perceived violations of academic freedom and university independence,â she said.
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However, Dr Sabry said, the effect of the ordinance would be limited because male and female students already sat in separate areas of Kuwait University classrooms.
Christopher Davidson, an expert on the region and associate fellow of the European Centre for International Affairs, said it was primarily a political manoeuvre â an offer of âlow-hanging fruitâ to Islamist candidates who performed well in National Assembly elections.
âIn this case, reversing co-education in Kuwaitâs national university is a relative straightforward and containable gesture,â he said.
âItâs very unlikely to be applied to private sector universities, including the various foreign branch campuses.â
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The debate follows the accession of a new emir of Kuwait, Mishal Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, in December.
Dr Sabry said it was too early to tell how the new ruler would affect the higher education sector but noted that his appointment of Mohammad Sabah Al-Salem Al-Sabah, a Harvard-educated economist, as prime minister, along with a number of highly educated ministers, suggested a continued emphasis on quality of education.
âThe emirâs vision aims to improve educational outcomes and make sure that university graduates are career ready as well as strengthen [the sectorâs] accountability,â Dr Sabry said.
âHe also vowed to fight corruption across the state including corruption in universities and issues of plagiarism.â
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Dr Sabry added that the new emir was likely to continue with his predecessorâs policy of replacing foreigners in the workforce with Kuwaiti citizens.
âOverall, the nationalisation policy remains a key focus in Kuwait, [with the aim of producing] highly qualified graduates for diverse roles in the countryâs economy,â she added.
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âThis approach tends to limit external engagement and competition, potentially limiting innovation and creativity as well as decreasing motivations.â
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