The Department for Education has commissioned Prospects to continue the fight against degree fraud with a new emphasis on international co-operation.
Thirty two operators masquerading online as genuine UK universities and colleges have been shut down since Prospects Higher Education Degree Datacheck (HEDD) was appointed last year by the former Department for Business, Innovation & Skills1 to reduce the number of unaccredited institutions by increasing prosecutions. The Prospects HEDD fraud team has been working with the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau and other law enforcement agencies to force closure of operators violating the Education Reform Act.
Around 80 percent of the fake universities reported to HEDD are based outside the UK and therefore cannot be prosecuted. Year two of the project will focus on dealing with offenders at a local level through international collaboration with the equivalent authorities overseas and the Groningen Declaration Network. Jayne Rowley, director for Prospects HEDD said: “We’ve made incredible progress over the last year, developing a shutdown process with law enforcement agencies and making alliances overseas, so we’re in a good place to make a bigger impact on offenders based outside our legal system.
“With the onset of the internet and distance learning degree fraud is a borderless crime and we must collaborate with agencies around the world to deal with it. We also need to get people thinking more about prevention. We’ve developed free toolkits for higher education providers and employers to help them develop policies on tackling degree fraud.” As part of the project Prospects has been raising awareness of degree fraud. Degree verification through HEDD has increased 16 percent year-on-year. More than 116,000 checks and a total of 220 bogus institutions have been officially identified since the service launched in 2011.