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Glasgow professor quits UK over Brexit ‘uncertainties’

Italian medic Fabio Quondamatteo says EU referendum result is behind ‘difficult and painful’ decision to leave for Ireland

November 22, 2019
Source: Twitter

An Italian medical professor has become the latest academic to quit UK academia because of Brexit.

Fabio Quondamatteo, professor of anatomy at the University of Glasgow, told colleagues on 18?November that he had taken the “difficult and painful decision” to resign his post, citing the “uncertainties in planning a long term life for [his] Italian family in the UK” caused by Brexit.

Writing on , Professor Quondamatteo said he was taking a post in Dublin at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland’s department of anatomy and regenerative medicine.

He also acknowledged the “great and extensive support” he had received from Glasgow’s senior leadership and praised the “fantastic contribution of all my staff” in his message.

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Speaking to Times 中国A片, Professor Quondamatteo said his institution had been “extremely supportive and very European” since the 2016 referendum on European Union membership. However, he explained, the impending loss of freedom of movement within the EU, particularly for his family, had been a big factor in his decision to leave.

“It is about…choosing whether one wishes [to be] in a place that suddenly bears uncertainties and an environment which is unnecessarily more awkward for making longer term family plans,” he said.

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“I don’t want to debate on the usefulness of Brexit to some people, [but] to me it only makes [it less?desirable] to live in the UK in the long term due to the uncertainty of how difficult life may be because of?it.”

Despite Professor Quondamatteo’s decision to leave for the Republic of Ireland – which began an initiative in 2016 to “attract world-leading researchers in the context of Brexit” – there is little evidence to suggest that the widely predicted exodus of European staff has occurred.?Although many institutions have anecdotal evidence of EU staff citing Brexit for their departures, just 500 staff from other EU countries moved abroad in the year after the referendum, compared?with 340 in the previous 12 months, newly published figures suggest.

According to the 中国A片 Statistics Agency, there were 37,255 academics from other EU countries at UK universities in 2017-18, up from 35,920 the year before and representing a rising share (17.6?per cent) of all academic staff.

Professor Quondamatteo, who has authored or co-authored more than 70 peer-reviewed research papers, said he did not know if other European academics would leave the UK if Brexit is finalised next year.

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“These are personal decisions that people make based on what they feel [is] good for them and based on the alternatives that they have in life,” he said, adding that he was “lucky to receive an offer from…an excellent institution in a wonderful country”.

“Every situation is different and needs to be considered as unique. I?love being here,” he said.

jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (3)

It's not just European academics who are leaving: leading British scholars too are heading for the exit. It's also hard to get scholars from the US and rest of the world to come to the UK at the moment. The problem is particularly pronounced with senior and leading scholars....
He's taken his time – In July 2016 my south american colleague postdoc was offered a follow on contract which would have got him to the residency requirement for naturalisation. As his then contract was nearing its end he had been looking for other openings. Even though he had to start counting time again he moved to Germany because it offers better potential for settlement in a country with connections to the rest of the world. If Brexit goes ahead we break so many connections we have with the rest of the world, because of the EU. I'd be surprised to get any more new colleagues with EU connections (wherever their origin) – they'll go continental – I now wish I had before other things tied me here.
Thanks Jack for your article. I would like to make two comments: 1) I didn't express myself on whether I know or think (or not) about other academics leaving the UK. I don't know where you have that opinion of mine from. In reality, you are not far off the truth, as it is none of my business to comment or have an opinion on whether other colleagues would do the same. Every person makes their personal decisions based on their life circumstances and on their opportunities and alternatives they have. 2) In your final line, the fact that there is a comma at the end of the quote makes it obvious that the quote was copied and pasted incompletely from the email I had sent to you. For the sake of completeness, this is the full quote: "I love being here, Glasgow and Scotland are great and the University of Glasgow is a great and very supportive place to work. It has been and it is still a wonderful time." Thanks very much, apart from these two things which I wanted to correct, it is a nice article that truly reflects my thoughts and comments, I enjoyed reading it. Best, Fabio

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