All posts tagged: mergers

The Identity Crisis Behind Mergers in Higher Education

The Identity Crisis Behind Mergers in Higher Education

Conversations around higher education mergers require explorations of identity, emotion, and systems. People do not respond to mergers simply because reporting lines change or departments reorganize. They respond because mergers disrupt meaning, belonging, relationships, status, and identity. What looks from the outside like resistance to change is often something much deeper: an attempt to preserve a sense of self within a shifting institutional landscape. In earlier posts, I discussed how family systems theory can help explain why mergers evoke such strong emotional reactions across universities. In this next post, I want to build on that idea using Stryker and Burke’s Identity Theory to explore why people within the same merger can experience it in dramatically different ways — from excitement and possibility to grief, anger, withdrawal, or distrust. When faculty hear that their college will merge with another unit, the reaction is often framed publicly as resistance to change, territoriality, or concern about budgets and governance. But those explanations rarely capture the emotional intensity that follows. Why does a structural change in an organization feel …

Largest black holes formed by violent mergers, rather than collapsing stars

Largest black holes formed by violent mergers, rather than collapsing stars

A new study has found that there are two distinct black hole populations- those formed by the established stellar collapse model, and those formed as a result of repeated, violent mergers in dense star clusters. The largest black holes in the Universe, detected through the ripples they create in spacetime, are not formed directly from collapsing stars, according to new research led by Cardiff University. Instead, these cosmic giants grow through a series of repeated, violent mergers within densely populated star clusters. The study analysed version 4.0 of the Gravitational-Wave Transient Catalog (GWTC-4), compiled by the LIGO–Virgo–KAGRA collaboration, which includes 153 confidently detected black hole mergers. The research team aimed to investigate whether the heaviest black holes observed are actually second-generation objects—formed when smaller black holes merge and then merge again within the dense cores of star clusters, where stars are packed up to a million times more tightly than in the Sun’s neighbourhood. Published in Nature Astronomy, the findings reveal two distinct black hole populations. Lead author Dr Fabio Antonini from Cardiff University’s School …

New merger rules are no free ride for European champions, says Teresa Ribera – POLITICO

New merger rules are no free ride for European champions, says Teresa Ribera – POLITICO

Ribera, who as executive vice president ranks second to Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, enforces antitrust policy across the 27-nation bloc. Her comments contrast with her boss’ calls to nurture European business “champions” that can hold their own against China’s world-beating exporters and U.S. tech titans. The Spanish commissioner said that the industrial restructuring of sectors like telecoms was impeded by the fragmentation of national markets, and not the bloc’s merger rules. “It needs to be proven that there are benefits we will be enjoying in the time to come. And not just: I want to be big,” she said. Ribera also issued a pointed warning to member countries tempted to use the guidelines’ new resilience and security exceptions to pick domestic winners. “We also invite national competition authorities and national governments to make a very self-restrained understanding of what this could mean,” she said. Her remarks follow Italy’s intervention in Milan-based UniCredit’s bid for local rival Banco BPM, and the conditions set by the Spanish government on BBVA’s attempts to acquire Sabadell. Both …

Could further education colleges get involved with university mergers? It might help meet Keir Starmer’s education goals

Could further education colleges get involved with university mergers? It might help meet Keir Starmer’s education goals

The merger of Kent and Greenwich universities is set to produce the UK’s first “super-university”. This structure will help the universities manage financial risks, while sustaining their distinctive identities. And the merger could also provide a model for the prime minister’s vision for post-compulsory education, outlined recently at the Labour party conference. Keir Starmer wants two-thirds of young people to enter higher or technical education or apprenticeships. This embraces both further and higher education, and it demands coherence between them. Building on the model agreed between Kent and Greenwich, that could be achieved by colleges joining universities within a single group. Further education colleges offer a high proportion of the nation’s technical qualifications and apprenticeships, which are central to the prime minister’s target. In towns without universities, colleges provide the route through post-compulsory education. This is often within group structures. Some already have links with higher education. London South East Colleges, for instance, has seven campuses, which reach south from Greenwich. The group also has a partnership with the University of Greenwich. Colleges have experienced …