From exchange to co-creation: new models of UK–Central Asia educational collaboration

Date 7 May 2026
Time 5:30 - 7pm
Location Marylebone Campus
Cost Free
This is a free event, but registration is required.

The Forum for Uzbek and Silk Road Studies is pleased to invite you to a public lecture by Professor Stephen Corbett, Pro Vice Chancellor for Education, Health and Human Sciences at the University of Greenwich.

Westminster Business School Marylebone Campus

During this interactive presentation, Professor Corbett will explore how universities can move beyond traditional mobility schemes towards deeper, more equitable, and mutually beneficial partnerships. Drawing on his experience working in Central Asia, he will reflect on the political and cultural drivers shaping collaboration between the UK and the region, and discuss how meaningful partnerships can support innovation in education, research, and policy.

The lecture will consider practical approaches to strengthening UK–Central Asia relations through transnational education, collaborative research, and cutting-edge pedagogical practice, with a focus on enhancing student experience and maximising the contribution of higher education to society in a rapidly changing global landscape.

The Forum for Uzbek and Silk Road Studies (FUSRS) is a joint initiative between Westminster International University in Tashkent and the University of Westminster in London that provides an inclusive and dynamic platform for debate and discussion on contemporary developments in Uzbekistan, Central Asia, and the wider Silk Road and Eurasian regions. The Forum has supported more than 30 collaborative research projects spanning topics such as artificial intelligence and health technologies, sustainability and higher education governance, green and resilient urban development, and other interdisciplinary areas, alongside a wide range of in-person and virtual seminars, workshops, symposia and public research events that engage diverse research communities. Its activities are further supported by the University of Westminster Press Silk Road journal.

About the speaker