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More community, less ‘ivory tower’: Alliance Manchester Business School looks to the future as it marks 60 years

Institution's book says business schools 'can’t afford to sit on the sidelines of the big questions facing society'

Christina Taylor, founder of Aim Sky High (second from right) speaks at the Reimagining Business Schools for the 21st Century event to mark Alliance Manchester Business School's 60th anniversary. She is watched by, from left, Ken McPhail, head of AMBS; Prof Duncan Ivison, president and vice-chancellor at the University of Manchester; Prof Fiona Devine, dean of the Faculty of Humanities; and Niaz Rayan, AMBS alumnus and entrepreneur(Image: Alliance Manchester Business School)

Business schools need to get involved in the communities they serve and help the entrepreneurs of the future – that was the message from a celebration of 60 years of the Alliance Manchester Business School.

The school is celebrating its 60th anniversary this year and is celebrating with the launch of a book called Reimagining Business Schools for the 21st Century.

The essay collection, edited by AMBS head Prof Ken McPhail, says business schools and their graduates need to help tackle the challenges the world faces today, from inequality and climate change through to the rise of AI and the global challenges to democracy.

It’s an ambitious mission and one that needs to start locally, as BusinessLive heard at the book’s launch event.

One of the panelists was AMBS graduate Christina Taylor, who founded social enterprise Aim Sky High and its sister talent agency in Manchester, and has gone on to win global recognition.

It was quite a week for Christina, who two days after the AMBS event won the Football Industry Awards Rising Star of the Year title at the Global Football Industry Awards. She has already been and in 2020 was named one of Business Insider’s .

Christina told the audience how she found her way to Manchester University through its outreach programmes and ultimately ended up doing postgraduate research into enterprise in disadvantaged communities – an area she said remained under-studied.

She said the business school needed to keep reaching out into all Manchester’s communities. And she added: “I’m so passionate that if you find the right entrepreneur and give the people from those communities a chance, the majority of the time they’re going to invest in their own communities because they want to solve the problems that they grew up with.”