Copyright
Richard HellerPublished On
2026-05-05Language
- English
Print Length
20 pagesTHEMA
- JN
- JNM
- UYQ
- JNA
- JNK
BISAC
- EDU015000
- EDU040000
- EDU016000
- EDU032000
- COM004000
Keywords
- Distributed education
- Online learning
- Knowledge equity
- Digital technology
- University transformation
- Open access
Societal values
This chapter identifies the major sources of inequity in access to education—and hence the need for improvement—while also examining the role of the university in developing theory and practice relating to major societal issues and discussing whether universities are ethical in their response to societal need. The chapter then starts to identify how a distributed approach can reduce knowledge inequity.
Contributors
Richard F. Heller
(author)Richard Heller, Emeritus Professor of Medicine, University of Newcastle, Australia and of Public Health, University of Manchester, UK, has a medical degree and doctorate from the University of London, United Kingdom. He was Professor of Clinical Epidemiology and Community Medicine at the University of Newcastle, Australia and Professor of Public Health at the University of Manchester, United Kingdom. Richard was also the founder and coordinator of the People’s Open Access Education Initiative (https://www.peoples-uni.org/), which aimed to provide Public Health capacity building in developing countries at low cost, through e-learning using open access resources on the internet, and leading to an MPH degree. Recent work has been in conjunction with the West and Central African Research and Education Network (WACREN) to develop Diamond Open Access initiatives for public health in Africa. He authored Distributed University for Sustainable Higher Education and was co-editor of Stories of Hope:- Reimagining Education, https://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/obp.0462