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Perth's Universities: Building the Knowledge Economy of Western Australia
The four major universities provide the intellectual infrastructure for the state's economic diversification.
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The four major universities provide the intellectual infrastructure for the state's economic diversification.

Perth's university sector, comprising the University of Western Australia, Curtin University, Murdoch University, and Edith Cowan University, provides the higher education and research infrastructure for a state whose economic diversification beyond resources depends on developing knowledge economy capabilities. The combined student population of the Perth universities reflects both the domestic demand for higher education and the international student market that has made Western Australia an important destination for students from Southeast Asia and beyond.
The University of Western Australia, with its colonial sandstone buildings on the banks of the Swan River at Crawley, provides the visual identity of Perth's university sector, its campus among the most beautiful in Australia and a heritage asset that the university manages alongside its contemporary research and teaching mission. UWA's research strengths in marine science, agriculture, and the physical sciences reflect the specific research priorities that Western Australia's economic and environmental context creates.
Curtin University has grown into WA's largest university, with a technology and engineering focus that connects directly to the resources and construction industries that drive the state's economy. Curtin's international student numbers and its global partnerships reflect an internationalisation strategy that has made it one of the most globally connected Australian universities outside the Group of Eight.
The universities' combined contribution to the AUKUS-related defence technology capabilities that Western Australia is developing, through research programs in submarine engineering, materials science, and the technical disciplines that the nuclear-powered submarine program will require, provides a direct connection between the university sector's capabilities and the state's strategic economic positioning. The alignment between university research and the defence technology investment that AUKUS represents creates the demand for university-trained engineers and scientists that justifies the education investment.
This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
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Published by The Daily Perth
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