Euclid Consortium


The Euclid Consortium is a distance learning educational consortium created in 2005 by the University of Bangui, the Université Libre Internationale, and the International Organization for Sustainable Development. The original name was Euclid University Consortium, but the structure was renamed in December 2008 in order to avoid confusion with EUCLID University, which is a member of the consortium.

History, membership and programs

The Euclid initiative began in June 2004 as a cooperative project between the Human Bioethics Treaty Organization and the Embassy of the Central African Republic in Washington, DC. This led to the formalization of an educational extension project with the University of Bangui and the private Université Libre Internationale of Brussels as co-founders. In January 2006, the agreements were revised and transferred with the formation of IOSD and the participation of the Université Libre du Burkina alongside ULI.
The University of N'Djamena, became a full member of the consortium in May 2006, adding the institutional recognition of its IAU member status and the approval of its Ministry of Education to the initiative. In 2007, the Gaston Berger University of Senegal announced its intention to participate in the consortium and confirmed the same in 2008.
The Consortium organizes online degree programs on behalf of the member schools and manages other joint academic initiatives of interest to the participating universities. The programs are offered in French and English, notably in Diplomacy, Sustainable Development and Religious Studies, which are structured after the Bologna Process in order to follow both European Union and United States guidelines.

Structure and organization

The consortium's educational programs are managed by 4 academic units called schools:
Since 2009, the programs are directly managed by EUCLID, and the original academic units were absorbed in EUCLID. However, EUCLID University is not a recognised degree-granting institution.
The Euclid Consortium is headed by a high steward, the ambassador of the Central African Republic to the United States, His Excellency Emmanuel Touaboye and an executive president, Mr. Syed Zahid Ali, who is also the secretary-general of EUCLID.
Academic oversight is under the responsibility of the oversight council, whose co-chairmen are the rectors of the participating universities.

Member universities

+ Consortium members but not joint degree granters

Accreditation process and institutional evolution

This inter-university initiative was originally named "Pôle d'Extension Universitaire Euclide" and the name "Euclid University" was initially used as a short translation of the French name, hence giving the unintentional impression that the extension consortium was intended to be a free-standing, degree-granting institution. This technical and legal issue led to recognition problems in the English-speaking world. In order to correct this situation, the official English name was amended to "Euclid University Consortium" to emphasize the fact that Euclid was originally designed as a consortium, not a free-standing university with its own charter and degrees. In January 2009, the name was further changed to "Euclid Consortium."
Because the international directory of UNESCO does not list inter-institutional consortia, the registration of the extension initiative was done under the entry for the universities of N'Djamena and Bangui.
Hence, the Consortium's recognition is tied to the recognition of the member universities, two of which are the actual degree granters, since the consortium itself has no direct degree-granting authority.
In December 2006, IOSD signed an agreement with the Islamic Chamber of Commerce and Industry, an affiliated institution of the 57 member-state Organisation of the Islamic Conference, establishing the recognition of its programs and applicable accreditations.
In 2008, the need for the consortium to obtain an autonomous charter and direct governmental accreditation led to the introduction of a multilateral Memorandum of Understanding which was approved by four initial Participating States. This intergovernmental agreement formalized the constitution of EUCLID as an intergovernmental university framework with legal personality. This initial agreement was succeeded by a revised framework agreement, and both indicated that EUCLID would also become a member of the Euclid Consortium which remains an active partnership.