-
Kenya's economy faces climate change risks: World Bank
-
Germany's labour market dilemma: rising unemployment despite vacancies
-
Over 1 million migrants apply for Spain's mass regularisation: PM
-
New Oxford academic centre symbolises UK's big-donor era
-
NASA robot mission aiming to rescue space telescope
-
Taiwan's ageing seaweed harvesters hope younger women wade in
-
HUNTING/HER Headhunter Talk with EnBW Board Member & CHRO Colette Rückert-Hennen
-
Extreme heat warning issued for World Cup host Kansas City
-
World Bank drops climate finance targets in renewed action plan
-
Tech rebound lifts Dow to record, yen hits 40-year low against dollar
-
US Supreme Court rules on dragnet searches of cellphone location data
-
Europe's deadly heatwave scorches east, Slovakia hits record
-
Paris funeral homes overwhelmed after record heatwave
-
Top US court upholds $5mn Trump sex assault judgment
-
Bolivia removes 15-year dollar peg in bid to revive economy
-
Supreme Court boosts Trump's power to fire officials, but protects Fed
-
Burnham pledges radical devolution of UK govt if PM
-
Trump says Iran meeting to take place in Qatar
-
Spain raises 2026 growth forecast despite Mideast war turmoil
-
Kenya-US rare earths deal challenged in court over secrecy
-
Europe's deadly heatwave scorches eastern flank, takes aim at Ukraine
-
South Korea to invest nearly $1.2 tn in chips, AI data centres
-
Stocks mixed and oil rises as US, Iran call end to latest attacks
-
EU, China trade tensions loom over minister visit
-
For sale on Facebook: monkeys, rhino horn and dead pangolins
-
NOVARION Systems showcases NOVARA
-
Augusta Tops Best Gold IRA Companies List By Gold Advisor
-
Iran warns ships not to bypass its chosen Hormuz route
-
Iran warns challenge to Hormuz routes will spike Middle East tensions
-
Cycling industry bets on smart bikes to boost sales
-
Asia's vendors grapple with rising costs of ever-present plastics
-
Where are they? Dogs disappear before South Korea meat ban
-
Take brutally hot weather seriously, heatstroke survivor warns
-
World's largest particle smasher halts for upgrade to boost hunt for dark matter
-
Prince Harry and family to stay at royal residences on UK visit
-
Records tumble as European heatwave moves east
-
World Cup fans get taste of American life -- at the mall
-
Swiss glaciers facing drastic loss from heatwave: expert
-
Movie theaters are allies for streamers like us, Apple exec says
-
Should we fear an AI bubble bust?
-
American businesswoman Michele Kang buys French club Lyon
-
Germany sees hottest temperature on record of 41.3C: weather service
-
AI abuse deterring good MPs: incoming IPU chief
-
Europe heatwave shattering temperature records: UN
-
UK hottest June day record broken for third day in a row: Met Office
-
Farm workers wilt in sweltering Italian shanty town
-
UN demands probes into US ICE custody deaths
-
European heatwave's unlikely accomplice: an ocean 'cold blob'
-
How the British royal family is funded, and where the money goes
-
Floods kill two in Taiwan as twin storms approach Japan
New Oxford academic centre symbolises UK's big-donor era
With its grand atrium, 500-seat acoustics-led concert hall and other state-of-the-art spaces, Oxford's Schwarzman Centre is the newest example of an elite UK university showcasing a billionaire's endowment.
Completed last year, it was paid for by a £185-million ($250-million) gift from American private equity titan Stephen Schwarzman -- the latest in a string of primarily domestic and US mega-philanthropists donating to Britain's top universities this century.
This big-donor era, which emulates the more established philanthropy of the United States, has coincided with UK government cuts to higher education funding, prompting universities to hike student fees and boost gift-netting efforts.
It has also emerged as the super-rich give more, earlier in their lives, according to sector experts.
"Increasingly, we are seeing philanthropists giving from earned income... while they're still active in business," Karl Wilding, lecturer at Kent Business School's Centre for Philanthropy, told AFP.
"US philanthropists form a substantial proportion of this class of elite givers, reflecting the distribution of wealth globally," he added while noting such philanthropy was also growing in East Asia.
The trend has earned criticism.
Schwarzman's Blackstone firm, one of the world's biggest commercial landlords, has faced condemnation over some of its alleged practices.
Oxford faculty and students opposed the donation when it was announced in 2019, writing in an open letter the centre "will be built with the proceeds of the exploitation and disenfranchisement of vulnerable people".
"I can't say I'm thrilled about it," classics student Grace, 21, told AFP.
"But I definitely benefit from the building so... it's a tough one."
- 'Vision' -
The centre houses seven humanities faculties, two technology institutes and the new Bodleian Humanities Library.
Its concert hall, a separate 250-seat theatre and other spaces will host annual public cultural programmes, which launched in April.
Schwarzman, who received an honorary British knighthood in 2024 for his philanthropy, gazes down from a portrait hanging near the atrium -- built to the same specifications as Oxford's iconic 18th century Radcliffe Camera landmark building.
John Fulljames, the centre's cultural programme director, called the donation "transformative".
"It was part of the vision of the gift that the university should be opening up to artists, to the cultural sector," he told AFP.
Fulljames noted the business magnate -- a donor to his US alma mater, Yale, among others -- was "engaged" during years of construction.
"It's been wonderful to see him here taking care of an investment which is going to bear dividends across the next century."
Such gifts to UK universities increased by 93 percent in the decade to 2022, reaching a record £1.5 billion that year, according to a 2023 report by higher education association CASE.
But the distribution was uneven, with Oxford and Cambridge -- known as "Oxbridge" -- accounting for nearly half.
Underlining the imbalance, British billionaire hedge fund owner Chris Rokos in March announced a £190-million gift to Cambridge -- billed the largest in modern times to a UK university.
- 'Magnet' -
"The overall giving continues to go up, but it relies on a smaller number of bigger donors," Amir Pasic, dean of Indiana University's School of Philanthropy, told AFP.
"Higher education does tend to be a magnet for the very large gifts."
In the US, President Donald Trump is battling major universities, including cutting their funding, amid accusations faculties have a left-wing tilt and permit alleged antisemitism on campus.
Pasic said it was too soon to assess whether that was impacting philanthropy, while noting American donations to Oxbridge were a longstanding tradition -- though now with a modern tilt.
"There's interest in creating not your classical foundations that the Rockefellers and the Carnegies created," he said. "They're trying to use other vehicles also to pursue social impact."
Examples include the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation launching a scholarships programme in 2000 with a record $210 million University of Cambridge donation.
In 2012, Wales-born US venture capitalist Michael Moritz and his wife gave Oxford £75 million to establish scholarships for low-income students.
British investor and right-wing media mogul Paul Marshall's 2021 £50-million gift to the London School of Economics showed other top-tier institutions can also net big sums.
Meanwhile on Oxford's southern fringes another American and Trump ally, Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, has spent more than £1 billion building his for-profit technology institute, forming a "strategic alliance" with the city's acclaimed university.
Billed as "where science, education, and commercialisation reinforce one another," the alliance will see it invest at least £100 million in joint ventures "to tackle global challenges".
O.Ignatyev--CPN