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Seismic shifts in geopolitics and rapid technological advancements in the realm of artificial intelligence, automation, and data-driven systems are reconfiguring how expertise functions, how organisations are structured, and how professional pathways evolve. Universities must therefore examine whether their institutional design, pedagogy, and leadership priorities are aligned with the complexity students will encounter over decades of technological and geopolitical change.
 

Global academic leaders convened at Ahmedabad University for a cross-continental liberal arts collaborative
 

Ahmedabad University hosted leaders from Vassar College, University of Edinburgh, and University of Global Health Equity as part of the Global Collaborative for the Liberal Arts. The partnership brings together institutions committed to cultivating intellectual agility alongside technological competence through coordinated academic design and institutional reflection.
 

With institutions spread across continents, the Global Collaborative for the Liberal Arts fosters sustained comparative reflection on organisational culture, pedagogy, and educational outcomes within distinct higher education systems. This cross-continental structure allows curricular design and institutional strategy to be informed by varied political, economic, and technological environments, strengthening the capacity of each partner to undertake reform with shared insight and institutional clarity.
 

Professor Pankaj Chandra, Vice Chancellor of Ahmedabad University, said, “Preparing students for the age of artificial intelligence requires more than adding technical modules. Institutions must cultivate intellectual agility as a defined outcome. A concern for long term implications of any technology on society must enter the content as well as the pedagogy so that graduates are able to integrate technical knowledge with ethical reasoning and cross-disciplinary understanding.”
 

Sharing her insights about the urgent need for reimagining higher education, Professor Elizabeth Bradley, President of Vassar College, said, “Technological systems are advancing at extraordinary speed and they’re already having a transformative impact on learning. Higher education institutions must ensure that ethical reasoning, contextual judgment, and interdisciplinary inquiry stay at the forefront. Humanistic technological change requires intentional educational design.”
 

The 2026 shared academic theme, Humanistic Technological Innovation, examines how artificial intelligence, financial technologies, digital health systems, and data infrastructures can expand access and inclusion while strengthening public institutions. Each partner institution contributes a distinct disciplinary perspective, including financial technology and inclusion, planetary health, narrative medicine, and technology ethics.
 

Underscoring the implementation focused approach of the Collaborative, Professor Philip Cotton, Vice Chancellor of the University of Global Health Equity, said, “An important academic initiative within the partnership is the Global Scholars Course, a jointly developed programme connecting students across four continents through shared readings, structured dialogue, and collaborative project design. The course culminates in an academic immersion in Kigali, Rwanda, where cross-institutional teams develop proposals addressing gaps in access and inclusion within technological ecosystems.”
 

Hosting the 2026 convening in Ahmedabad reflects the increasingly multipolar character of educational leadership. Institutions across Asia, Africa, Europe, and North America are contributing to the redesign of higher education in ways that recognise technological transformation while sustaining the centrality of human judgment.
 

Professor Peter Mathieson, Principal and Vice Chancellor of the University of Edinburgh, said, “Universities operate in very different national and social contexts, yet many of the challenges we face in the global context are very similar. Collaborations such as the Global Collaborative for the Liberal Arts create opportunities for institutions to learn from one another while bringing diverse perspectives to shared questions about technology, society, and the future of education.”
 

Through the Global Collaborative for the Liberal Arts, the four institutions are advancing a coordinated model of education designed to prepare graduates for responsible leadership in a century defined by artificial intelligence and sustained complexity.
 

About Ahmedabad University

Ahmedabad University is a leading private, non-profit research university offering students a liberal education focused on interdisciplinary learning, practice orientation, and research thinking.
 

The University has been

  • Recognised by the Government of Gujarat as a Centre of Excellence.

  • Accredited with ‘A’ grade by the National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC).

  • Awarded Leadership and Management Team of the Year at the Times Higher Education Awards Asia 2025.

  • Awarded a 5-star rating, the highest awarded in the Gujarat State Institutional Rating Framework (GSIRF) for 2021-22 and 2023-24, by the Knowledge Consortium of Gujarat (KCG), Department of Education, Government of Gujarat.

  • Awarded the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) International Award for Excellence 2024 for its University Centre.

  • Awarded a ‘Platinum Rating’ by the Indian Green Building Council for sustainability and green practices.

  • Recognised by the UGC under Section 12(B) of the UGC Act, becoming one of the very few private research universities to have been awarded this recognition for select research universities.

  • Recognised as a Highly Commended University for Teaching and Learning Strategy of the Year in the Times Higher Education (THE) Awards Asia 2023.

  • Awarded the AACSB’s Innovations That Inspire Award 2023 for its Foundation Programme.

  • Awarded Gold Rating by the Indian Green Building Council for achieving the Green Building Standards at our University Centre.
     

The University, established in 2009, is rooted in the vision of one of India’s finest educational foundations, the Ahmedabad Education Society, which was founded in 1935 by nationalist leaders. Programmes at the University range from bachelors to doctoral levels in humanities and social sciences, natural sciences, engineering, and management through its 4 Schools and 10 Centres: 
 

Amrut Mody School of Management | Bagchi School of Public Health | School of Arts and Sciences | School of Engineering and Applied Science | Ahmedabad Design Lab | Centre for Heritage Management | Centre for Learning Futures | Global Centre for Environment and Energy | International Centre for Space and Cosmology | Sahyog: Centre for Promoting Health | Stepwell Centre for Asian Futures | The Climate Institute | The Institute of Manufacturing and Economy | VentureStudio
 

An urban university, Ahmedabad promotes independent-mindedness and diversity across all dimensions of its activity and helps students mature into critical thinkers who are analytically equipped, practically oriented, and contextually aware global citizens. The University provides a contemporary educational framework that brings liberal arts, sciences, and the professions to engage together in creating new knowledge for addressing complex challenges of the society and in offering majors that merge the boundaries of disciplines to prepare students for the new economy.


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