MOSAIC Project Policy Paper

Building Bridges Through Higher Education: Policy Recommendations for Regional Academic Cooperation

A Comprehensive Framework for Educational Partnership Among Cyprus, Israel, Jordan, and Morocco

What is MOSAIC?

The MOSAIC (Multidimensional Opportunities for Sustainable Academic and Intercultural Cooperation) project is an innovative and multidimensional approach involving decision-makers, lecturers and students to promote regional cooperation in higher education among Cyprus, Israel, Jordan and Morocco. The project is funded by the Ministry of Regional Cooperation.

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The MOSAIC project brings together the four countries in a partnership that covers five strategic strands: comparative higher education systems; climate-resilient agriculture; innovative teaching technologies; intercultural understanding; and student-led initiatives.

Key Findings

  • Shared challenges: faculty shortages (e.g., Morocco: 1 professor per 86 students), pedagogical training gaps, gender disparities (Morocco: 29% female researchers), limited research capacity.

  • Unique strengths: Morocco’s > 10,000 publications in 2023, arid-region agriculture expertise, technological innovation readiness, diverse cultural perspectives.

Core Recommendations

  • A permanent Regional Academic Cooperation Network with rotating leadership.

  • A joint Regional Innovation Fund for research & teaching collaborations.

  • Shared digital infrastructure for knowledge exchange.

  • Mobility programmes (faculty & students), with virtual participation options.

  • Institutionalised intercultural dialogue mechanisms across all activities.

Expected Outcomes

  • Stronger institutional capacity.

  • Higher research quality and relevance.

  • Enhanced teaching effectiveness via shared innovation.

  • Regional stability through people-to-people links.

  • Positioning the region as a model for South-South and Euro-Mediterranean cooperation.

Call to Action

Ministry officials are urged to commit to sustainable funding. University administrators should formalise partnerships via MOUs, enabling transition from project-based cooperation to permanent collaborative structures.

1. INTRODUCTION

1.1 Context and Rationale

Higher education is key to regional development, competitiveness and social cohesion. In an interconnected world, no country can tackle challenges—from climate change to technological disruption—in isolation. Although the Mediterranean/Middle East region has rich intellectual heritage and complementary strengths, its higher education systems have often been fragmented with limited cross-border cooperation.

The MOSAIC project emerges from recognition that Cyprus, Israel, Jordan and Morocco share both common challenges and complementary capabilities. Each country has developed its higher education system in distinct national contexts — yet all face pressures to improve quality, research output, faculty attraction, technology integration and graduate readiness for labour markets.

1.2 Project Overview and Methodology

MOSAIC applies a multidimensional approach involving decision-makers, lecturers and students across five integrated strands. Through comparative analysis, pilot collaborative research, technology-in-teaching explorations, intercultural dialogue and student-led initiatives, the project has produced findings and insights.

This policy paper synthesises data from comparative studies, stakeholder consultations, pilot activities and expert analysis conducted throughout the project lifecycle. It offers actionable recommendations to move from project-based cooperation to sustainable institutional partnerships.

1.3 Policy Objectives

This document aims to provide ministry officials and university administrators with a roadmap to promote and sustain regional academic cooperation by:

  • Identifying policy mechanisms for funding collaborative activities.

  • Proposing institutional frameworks for partnership governance.

  • Recommending strategies to address shared challenges.

  • Outlining pathways for scaling pilot initiatives into permanent programmes.

2. COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS: LEVERAGING REGIONAL STRENGTHS

2.1 Current State of Higher Education Systems

In Morocco: 297,887 new students enrolled in public universities in 2024-2025 (representing a 0.94% increase); 57.2% of these are female students. Morocco achieved over 10,000 scientific publications in 2023 and has one of its universities entering the Shanghai ranking at position 901.

Common regional challenges: high student-to-teacher ratios limiting supervision quality; weak pedagogical training for university faculty; gender imbalances in academic staff; misalignment between secondary education outcomes and university programme distribution; limited resources for scientific research and innovation; gaps in digital infrastructure and technology integration in teaching/learning.

Regional strengths: Morocco’s expertise in arid-region agriculture & water-resource management; advanced technological capabilities; multilingual/cultural diversity across partner countries; complementary research specialisations (life sciences, medical sciences, engineering, social sciences); established links with European/international academic networks.

2.2 Successful Practices for Regional Adoption

Our analysis identifies national practices suitable for regional adoption: teacher selection & professional development models; innovative quality assurance mechanisms; strong university–industry–civil society partnerships; digital platforms for remote learning and collaboration (especially observed during pandemic disruptions). Collaboration enables partners to share best practices rather than duplicate efforts — for instance, institutions with advanced pedagogical training can support those strengthening faculty development, and universities with strong industry-links can model graduate employability frameworks.

3. STRAND-SPECIFIC FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
3.1 Strand 1: Higher Education Systems Cooperation

Key Findings

  • Professor-to-student ratio in Morocco: 1:86
  • Only 29% of university professors are women
  • About 35% of science/technical baccalaureate holders enrol in humanities/social sciences — suggesting guidance system failures.
  • Regionally, pedagogical training is underdeveloped; emphasis remains on academic credentials rather than teaching competencies.

Policy Recommendations

  • Recommendation 1.1 – Regional Faculty Development Network:
    Connect faculty development centres across partner countries to develop and implement joint pedagogical training programmes, share materials & assessment tools, and facilitate inter-faculty exchange.

    Implementation Mechanism: Each country designates a coordinating institution; an annual regional workshop rotates among countries; a shared digital repository of multilingual training materials is established.

  • Recommendation 1.2 – Regional Quality Assurance Framework:
    Develop shared quality standards accommodating national specificities; establish peer-review mechanisms across borders; promote student mobility via credit-transfer systems.

  • Recommendation 1.3 – Address Gender Disparities Through Regional Initiatives:
    Launch mentorship programmes linking early-career female academics region-wide; create regional women-in-academia conferences; carry out shared research on barriers to women’s advancement in academia.

    Funding Requirements: Initial investment approx. US $500,000 annually (network coordination, faculty exchanges, digital platform). Long-term sustainability via cost-sharing and integration into national budgets.

3.2 Strand 2: Climate-Resilient Sustainable Agriculture

Key Findings

All partner countries face water-scarcity and climate change pressures on agriculture. Region’s strengths include traditional water-management know-how, capacity in precision agriculture/renewables, research in microalgae cultivation, photovoltaics, AI systems.

Strategic Importance

All partner countries face water-scarcity and climate change pressures on agriculture. Region’s strengths include traditional water-management know-how, capacity in precision agriculture/renewables, research in microalgae cultivation, photovoltaics, AI systems.

Policy Recommendations

  • Recommendation 2.1 – Regional Agricultural Innovation Center:
    Virtual centre coordinating research on integrated systems (microalgae + photovoltaics), AI optimisation of solar/biomass growth, water treatment in agriculture, scaling analyses for smallholder/commercial contexts.

    Implementation Mechanism: Partner universities contribute researchers; field demonstration sites in each country; annual symposia disseminating findings; open-access publications to maximise reach.

  • Recommendation 2.2 – Joint Graduate Programmes in Sustainable
    Agriculture: Regional master’s degrees with student mobility, combined coursework across institutions, practical training at demonstration sites.

  • Recommendation 2.3 – Engage Private Sector & International Partners:
    Industry advisory board linking ag-tech firms and research teams; seek funding from climate/agrarian organisations; build commercialization pathways for technologies benefiting farmers region-wide.

    Funding Requirements: Approx. US $1.5 million annually (research operations, demonstration sites, graduate support, knowledge dissemination). Additional funding to be mobilised via climate/agri-development bodies (e.g., GCF, FAO, regional development banks).

3.3 Strand 3: Innovative Technologies in Teaching

Key Findings

Digital divides persist between and within countries; variable faculty digital-literacy and confidence; successful tech-integration relies on pedagogical innovation more than hardware. Students show enthusiasm when digital collaboration is well-designed and culturally contextualised.

Policy Recommendations

  • Recommendation 3.1 – Regional Digital Teaching Resource Repository:
    Develop shared platform of openly-licensed teaching resources (lesson plans, case studies, assessment tools, multimedia) in multiple languages (Arabic, English, French, Greek, Hebrew). Include pedagogical review and cultural-sensitivity check. Organise by discipline, level, approach.

    Implementation Mechanism: Partner contributions of existing and new material; co-creation of interdisciplinary modules (e.g., climate change, water management, intercultural communication); adaptation/localisation for differing contexts; continuous user-feedback loop.

  • Recommendation 3.2 – Regional Faculty Technology Training Programme:
    Cascading “train-the-trainer” approach; focus on pedagogical use of tech, not just basic skills; include peer‐mentoring between tech-savvy and less experienced faculty.

  • Recommendation 3.3 – Virtual Student Collaboration Projects:
    Semester-long teams from multiple countries collaborate on shared challenges; rotating hosting model; utilise accessible platforms (Zoom, WhatsApp, shared docs) to accommodate connectivity constraints; evaluate impact on student learning, digital skills and intercultural competencies.

  • Recommendation 3.4 – Pursue Erasmus+ Small-Scale Partnership Funding:
    Align initiatives with EU digital education, inclusion and green objectives; begin bilateral collaborations, expand to four-country involvement; emphasise capacity building for less tech-equipped institutions.

    Funding Requirements: Approx. US $400,000 annually (platform development/maintenance, faculty training, student project support). Supplement with Erasmus+ and European funding.

3.4 Strand 4: Intercultural Understanding Through Education

Key Findings

Students/faculty highly interested in cultural learning in safe, respectful environments. Historical/political sensitivities must be carefully managed. Intercultural competencies are valued by employers but under-represented in curricula. Personal academic connections reduce stereotypes and build professional networks.

Policy Recommendations

  • Recommendation 4.1 – Regional Intercultural Competency Curriculum Framework:
    Shared learning outcomes/assessment criteria; modules on general and region-specific intercultural skills; teaching materials and case-studies reflecting regional contexts; integration into teacher-education programmes.

    Implementation Mechanism: Collaboration among humanities, social sciences & professional faculties; pilot implementation in selected courses; evaluation of student outcomes; then scale.

  • Recommendation 4.2 – Protocols for Addressing Sensitive Topics:
    Shared principles for respectful dialogue; faculty facilitation training; structured dialogue formats; conflict-resolution mechanisms for collaborative activities.

  • Recommendation 4.3 – Regional Intercultural Teaching Materials Repository:
    Compile resources on diverse cultural, religious, historical perspectives; peer-review for academic rigor/balance; region-wide educator access; ongoing expand via partner contributions.

  • Recommendation 4.4 – Faculty & Student Exchange Programmes:
    Short-term (1 week to 1 semester) exchanges for teaching, research or coursework; strong virtual exchange option where travel limited; include structured reflection components; track alumni networks.

    Funding Requirements: (curriculum development, materials creation, exchange program support, facilitator training).

3.5 Strand 5: Student-Led Cooperation Initiatives

Key Findings

Students show creativity and enthusiasm when given opportunities. Peer-to-peer interaction often bridges institutional or political barriers. Student perspectives differ meaningfully from faculty/administration. Virtual collaboration enables engagement despite travel limits. Student-led initiatives require institutional support to scale fully.

Policy Recommendations

  • Recommendation 5.1 – Annual Regional Student Conference:
    Rotating host country; student research presentations, poster sessions, panel discussions; workshops on collaboration, intercultural communication, professional development; hybrid format (in-person + virtual); publish proceedings open-access.

    Implementation Mechanism: Student organising committees from each country; faculty advisors; hybrid participation model; virtual inclusion ensures broad reach.

  • Recommendation 5.2 – Regional Student Digital Collaboration Platform:
    Online forum for students to propose and join cross-border projects; virtual workspace tools (doc sharing, communication, project-management); showcase completed projects to inspire new ones.

  • Recommendation 5.3 – Regional Student Hackathons & Competitions:
    Annual challenges aligned with regional priorities (sustainable agriculture, water management, education innovation, cultural heritage); multi-country student teams; industry/government as judges & potential employers; prizes/recognition for motivation.

  • Recommendation 5.4 – Peer Mentoring & Language Exchange Programs:
    Connect students across countries for mutual language learning (Arabic, Hebrew, Greek, French, English); mentoring between students in different educational systems; use accessible platforms; integrate into curricula for academic recognition.

  • Recommendation 5.5 – Institutionalise Student Voice in Governance:
    Include student reps in governance structures and policy discussions; create student advisory board for cooperation priorities; engage students in assessment of initiatives; develop leadership pathways for students bridging cultures/communities.

    Funding Requirements: Funding for annual conference support, platform development/maintenance, competition prizes and coordination. Student-led initiatives offer high return on investment through enthusiasm, innovation and relationship building.

4. IMPLEMENTATION FRAMEWORK

4.1 Governance Structure

  • Recommendation 4.1 – Establish Regional Academic Cooperation Council:
    Permanent governing body with representatives of higher-education ministries, foreign affairs, university rectors/vice-rectors, and student representatives. Semi-annual meetings, rotating chairmanship.

  • Recommendation 4.2 – Create Technical Working Groups:
    One per cooperation strand; faculty and administrative experts; quarterly meetings; report to Cooperation Council and flexible to form sub-groups as new priorities arise.

4.2 Funding Mechanisms

  • Recommendation 4.3 – Establish Regional Innovation Fund:
    Dedicated fund for collaborative research, teaching innovation and exchanges. Initial annual funding: US $3.5 million from participating countries. Grants from US $50k to US $500k. Require institutional cost-sharing.

  • Recommendation 4.4 – Leverage External Funding Sources:
    Tap EU (Erasmus+, Horizon Europe), UNESCO, World Bank, Islamic Development Bank; partner with private sector for applied research. Dedicated staff for funding opportunity monitoring and support.

  • Recommendation 4.5 – In-Kind Contributions:
    Financial contributions alone are insufficient. Encourage faculty time, facility/equipment access, administrative support, student participation via credit recognition.

4.3 Institutional Partnerships

  • Recommendation 4.6 – Formalise University Partnerships via MOUs:
    University administrators to sign clear MOUs on cooperation areas, roles, responsibilities, IP rights, communication, and conflict resolution. Balance specificity and flexibility.

  • Recommendation 4.7 – Designate Institutional Coordinators:
    Each partner university appoints a coordinator to facilitate activities, manage partner communication, support faculty/students, and report to leadership. Coordinators meet quarterly for best-practice sharing.

4.4 Monitoring & Evaluation

  • Recommendation 4.8 – Implement Comprehensive Assessment Framework:
    Track quantitative indicators (number of joint research/projects/publications; participant numbers; courses/programmes with regional components; external funding raised) and qualitative outcomes (satisfaction, teaching/research impact, internationalisation, intercultural understanding).

  • Recommendation 4.9 – Conduct Regular Reviews:
    Independent evaluation every 3 years; identify successes and challenges; publish evaluation reports for transparency and accountability.

5. ADDRESSING CHALLENGES & RISKS

5.1 Political & Diplomatic Sensitivities

Regional cooperation intersects complex political dynamics. Success requires delineating academic cooperation from broader political dialogue; establishing safe spaces for candid discussion; emphasising practical benefits; enabling virtual participation to circumvent travel sensitivities.

5.2 Resource Constraints

Financial and human-resource limitations constrain cooperation scale. Mitigation: prioritise high-impact activities; use technology to lower costs; build on current institutional strengths; pursue external funding aggressively; apply strategic prioritisation for resource allocation.

5.3 Linguistic & Cultural Barriers

A multilingual, multicultural region presents challenges and assets. Recommendations: adopt English as primary working language while respecting diversity; provide translation/interpretation for major events/documents; promote language learning among participants; produce orientation resources to help navigate diverse cultural contexts.

5.4 Institutional Inertia

Universities may resist new initiatives due to competition for limited resources/time. Overcome by: demonstrating tangible benefits via pilot activities; aligning cooperation with institutional strategic priorities; providing administrative relief for faculty; recognising/rewarding participation in cooperation via promotion & tenure.

5.5 Sustainability Beyond Project Funding

Transitioning from project to permanent cooperation requires deliberate sustainability planning: integrate successful pilots into institutional operations and budgets; diversify funding sources; build constituencies of faculty, students and administrators; document and share best practices for replication and scaling; embed cooperation culturally, not just financially.

6. EXPECTED OUTCOMES & IMPACT

6.1 Institutional Benefits

Participating institutions will see strengthened research capacity through collaborative projects and shared resources; improved teaching via pedagogical innovation and best-practice sharing; expanded international networks and competitiveness for global funding; greater ability to achieve objectives that are difficult solo.

6.2 Student & Faculty Benefits

Students and faculty gain intercultural competencies valued in global labour markets; expanded research collaboration and publication opportunities; professional development through shared teaching & learning; regional networks enhancing career and academic prospects; personal growth via cross-border experiences.

6.3 Regional Development Contributions

Beyond institutional gains, cooperation contributes to regional development: building human capital for innovation; enhancing people-to-people ties fostering mutual understanding and stability; generating research that addresses regional challenges (climate adaptation, water security, sustainable development); modelling constructive regional cooperation that could inspire other sectors.

6.4 International Positioning

Successful cooperation positions the Mediterranean/Middle-East region as a proactive model for South-South cooperation and Euro-Mediterranean partnership. Demonstrates ability to collaborate despite political complexity, influencing global perceptions and policies.

7. CONCLUSIONS & CALL TO ACTION

The MOSAIC project has shown that regional higher-education cooperation among Cyprus, Israel, Jordan and Morocco is both feasible and highly valuable. Comparative analysis confirms complementary strengths and shared challenges that form the basis for sustained collaboration. Pilot activities across the five strands have produced practical evidence of benefits and identified effective approaches and barriers.

To transition from a finite project to a permanent regional cooperation framework, ministries must commit funding and policy support, and universities must formalise partnerships, assign resources/personnel, integrate cooperation into strategic plans, and provide incentives for faculty and students.

The path ahead is clear. Evidence supports the value proposition. What remains is collective commitment to systematic and persistent implementation of the recommendations. We face a choice: let this promising initiative end with the project timeline, or build structures that enable ongoing collaboration with compounding benefits.

Regional challenges — from water scarcity to labour-market transformation to intercultural understanding — demand regional solutions. Higher education cooperation offers a mechanism to develop shared knowledge, build human capacity and foster relationships transcending political divides. Investment in education cooperation is an investment in regional stability, prosperity and human development.

Action Steps (within 6 months):

  • Approve sustainable funding mechanisms.

  • Sign institutional partnership MOUs.

  • Designate coordinators and working groups.

  • Launch priority initiatives.

  • Embed cooperation into institutional strategy.

“The future of regional higher education cooperation depends on decisions made today.”

Choose collaboration over isolation, innovation over inertia, and shared prosperity over missed opportunities.

Together, Cyprus, Israel, Jordan and Morocco can build a model of educational partnership inspiring the Mediterranean region and beyond.

ANNEX A: IMPLEMENTATION TIMELINE

Months 1-3 (Immediate Actions):

  • Establish Regional Academic Cooperation Council

  • Secure initial funding commitments from participating countries

  • Sign MOUs between partner universities

  • Designate institutional coordinators

  • Launch Regional Innovation Fund application process

Months 4-6 (Foundation Building):

  • Form technical working groups for each cooperation strand

  • Award first round of Innovation Fund grants

  • Initiate development of digital teaching resource repository

  • Plan inaugural regional student conference

  • Begin faculty development network activities

Months 7-12 (Program Launch):

  • Implement first faculty and student exchanges

  • Launch agricultural research demonstration sites

  • Hold first regional student conference

  • Conduct technology training programmes for faculty

  • Develop intercultural competency curriculum framework

Year 2 (Expansion and Refinement):

  • Scale successful pilot initiatives

  • Pursue Erasmus+ and international funding

  • Conduct mid-term evaluation and adjustments

  • Expand participation beyond initial institutions

  • Develop sustainability strategies

Year 3+ (Institutionalization):

  • Integrate cooperation activities into permanent institutional structures

  • Achieve financial sustainability through diversified funding

  • Document and disseminate successful practices

  • Explore expansion to additional countries and institutions

  • Conduct comprehensive impact evaluation

ANNEX B: BUDGET SUMMARY

Annual Operating Budget (Steady State):

  • Regional Academic Cooperation Council operations:

  • Regional Innovation Fund grants:

  • Faculty Development Network:

  • Agricultural Innovation Center:

  • Technology Integration initiatives:

  • Intercultural Understanding programs:

  • Student-Led Cooperation initiatives:

  • Monitoring, evaluation, communications:

Total Annual Budget:

Cost-Sharing Model:

  • Participating countries:

  • External funding (EU, international organisations):

  • In-kind contributions from institutions:

Document Information

Policy Paper prepared by MOSAIC Project Consortium For Ministry Officials and University Administrators – Cyprus | Israel | Jordan | Morocco October 2025

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