Rankings and Sustainability

The IREG 2025 Conference, “University Rankings and the Challenges of Sustainability,” organized jointly with Abu Dhabi University’s 3rd International Conference on Advancing Sustainable Futures, was held in Abu Dhabi on 10–11 December. The panel “Reimagining Rankings – Supporting a University’s Place and Direction with a Focus on Sustainability and Innovation” was chaired by György Fábri (ELTE, Faculty of Education and Psychology, Institute of Research on Adult Education and Knowledge Management) . The session brought together Dr. M’hamed el Aisati (Netherlands), Vice President for Analytics & Data Services at Elsevier, alongside senior university leaders and experts from Denmark, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the Arab region.

In opening the discussion, Dr. Fábri articulated the fundamental dilemma that frames contemporary debates on rankings: on the one hand, rankings, publication metrics, and the associated notions of institutional productivity promote quantification and the pursuit of ever-increasing numerical outputs; on the other hand, sustainability demands a radically different orientation. The central question, as he formulated it, is therefore: How can these two logics remain valid and operative at the same time?

The panelists converged on a key point: the potential resolution does not lie in the rankings themselves, but in how rankings are used. The crucial issue is whether institutions and their leaders are able to treat indicators as contextualized feedback mechanisms, while avoiding the temptation to interpret ranking positions as absolute or definitive measures of institutional value.

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