Table Of ContentHigher Education in Regional and City  H Higher Education in Regional and City
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Development e Development
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SONORA, M,EXICO du
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t Sonora, 
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Sonora is one of the wealthiest states in Mexico and has made great strides in  n
building its human capital and skills. How can Sonora turn the potential of its   in Mexico
universities and technological institutions into an active asset for economic and   R
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social development? How can it improve the equity, quality and relevance of  g
education at all levels? io
n Jaana Puukka, Susan Christopherson,  
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l a Patrick Dubarle, Jocelyne Gacel-Ávila, 
This publication explores a range of helpful policy measures and institutional  n
reforms to mobilise higher education for regional development. It is part of the series  d C Vera Pavlakovich-Kochi
of the OECD reviews of Higher Education in Regional and City Development. These  it
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reviews help mobilise higher education institutions for economic, social and cultural   D
development of cities and regions. They analyse how the higher education system  e
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impacts upon regional and local development and bring together universities, other  lo
higher education institutions and public and private agencies to identify strategic  p
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goals and to work towards them. e
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CONTENTS S
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Chapter 1. Human capital development, labour market and skills ra
Chapter 2. Research, development and innovation , M
Chapter 3. Social, cultural and environmental development e
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Chapter 4. Globalisation and internationalisation ic
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Chapter 5. Capacity building for regional development
 
 
ISBN 978- 92-64-19333-8 
89 2013 01 1E1
Higher Education
in Regional and City
Development:
Sonora, Mexico
2013
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FOREWORD –   
 
 
Foreword 
Universities and other tertiary education institutions can play a key role 
in human capital development and innovation systems in their cities and 
regions. Since 2005, the Reviews of Higher Education in Regional and City 
Development have been the OECD’s tool to mobilise tertiary education for 
economic,  social  and  cultural  development  of  cities  and  regions.  The 
reviews have analysed how the tertiary education system impacts local and 
regional development and helped improve this impact in more than 30 cities 
and regions in over 20 countries. They have examined universities’ and 
tertiary  education  institution’s  contribution  to  human  capital  and  skills 
development; technology transfer and business innovation; social, cultural 
and environmental development; and regional capacity building. The review 
process has facilitated partnership building in cities and regions by drawing 
together tertiary education institutions and public and private agencies to 
identify strategic goals and work together towards them.  
The review of Sonora is the fourth review of its kind in Mexico, after 
the reviews higher education in regional and city development in Nuevo 
Leon (2006), Veracruz (2010) and Ciudad Juarez in Chihuahua (as part of 
the Paso del Norte review, 2010). It complements the reviews that have 
taken place in the strategically and economically important US-Mexico 
cross-border region, such as those of the Nuevo Leon, the Paso del Norte 
Region and most recently Southern Arizona (2011), right next to the state of 
Sonora.  
The principal objective of the Sonora review is to examine the links 
between the region and the tertiary education institutions, and to strengthen 
these links to the benefit of both. In this respect the key questions for Sonora 
are: How can the state of Sonora benefit from a stronger tertiary education 
system?  In  what  ways  can  universities  and  other  tertiary  education 
institutions individually and collectively contribute to the economic, social 
and cultural development of Sonora. It is our hope that Sonora’s experience 
in this review will be an inspiration for the state governments and cities in 
Mexico as well as their universities and tertiary education institutions. 
HIGHER EDUCATION IN REGIONAL AND CITY DEVELOPMENT: SONORA, MEXICO − © OECD 2013
5
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS –   
 
 
Acknowledgments 
The review visit to Sonora was led by Jaana Puukka (OECD) who also 
co-ordinated  this  publication  with  support  from  Bonifacio  Agapin  and 
Olivia Kelley. The members of the review team who contributed to this 
publication were Susan Christopherson (Cornell University, US), Patrick 
Dubarle  (former  OECD,  FR),  Jocelyne  Gacel-Avila  (University  of 
Guadalajara, MX) and Vera Pavlakovich-Kochi (University of Arizona, US) 
(See Annex A for further details). Rachel Linden supervised the publication 
process. This publication draws on interviews carried out during a week-
long  review  visit  on  11-16  March  2012  (Annex  II),  using  information 
provided to the review team as well as a range of other OECD reports, such 
as the OECD Studies on Water – Meeting the Water Reform Challenge 
(2012), OECD Territorial Reviews – Chihuahua (2012), OECD Economic 
Survey Mexico (2011), OECD Reviews of Innovation Policy Mexico (2009) 
and OECD Reviews of Tertiary Education Mexico (2008). 
We  are  grateful  to  all  stakeholders  in  Sonora,  representing  its 
government, business and industry, civic society and universities and other 
tertiary education institutions who contributed to the review. The OECD 
would like to thank in particular Gonzalo Rodríguez-Villanueva, the former 
rector of ITSON (the Instituto Tecnológico de Sonora), whose determination 
and insight made this review possible and whose efforts to transform ITSON 
into an engine of Southern Sonora’s development provide inspiration to 
university leaders globally. We would also like to thank Ernesto Flores-
Rivera  (ITSON)  who,  during  his  15-month  secondment  to  the  OECD, 
supported the success of the OECD reviews, while making preparations for 
the Sonora review. We thank the lead co-ordinator and his team as well as 
other active local counterparts for this review: José Manuel Ochoa-Alcántar, 
Manuel Ricardo Lugo-Cruz and Haziel Misael Ayala-Ceceña from ITSON, 
Benjamín  Burgos-Flores  from  the  University  of  Sonora  (UNISON, 
Universidad de Sonora), José Ángel Vera-Noriega from the Centre for 
Research on Nutrition and Development (CIAD, Centro de Investigación en 
Alimentación y Desarrollo)  and  Angel  Alberto  Valdés-Cuervo,  ITSON-
CIAD.  
HIGHER EDUCATION IN REGIONAL AND CITY DEVELOPMENT: SONORA, MEXICO − © OECD 2013
6
 – ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 
 
 
In the state government of Sonora our sincere thanks are extended to the 
following  representatives:  Jorge  Luis  Ibarra-Mendívil,  Secretary  of 
Education  in  Sonora;  Vicente  Pacheco-Castañeda,  Secretary  for  Upper 
Secondary  and  Higher  Education  in  Sonora;  Rogelio  Noriega-Vargas, 
Director for Upper Secondary and Higher Education in Sonora; Sandra 
Elena Gutiérrez-Preciado, General Director for Higher Education in Sonora; 
Gerardo Ochoa-Salcido, State of Sonora Commission for Higher Education 
Planning; Juan Bautista Lagarda-Muñoz, State of Sonora Commission for 
Higher Education Planning, as well as José Alfredo Gámez-Corrales from 
the Ministry of Economy. We also thank the following representatives from 
the Mixed Funds (Fondo Mixto) of the National Council of Science and 
Technology (CONACYT, Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología) in the 
state of Sonora: Juan Álvarez-López, Francisco Javier Cevallos-Rojas and 
José Manuel Zatarain-Domínguez. 
HIGHER EDUCATION IN REGIONAL AND CITY DEVELOPMENT: SONORA, MEXICO − © OECD 2013
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TABLE OF CONTENTS –   
 
 
Table of contents 
Foreword .............................................................................................................. 3 
Acknowledgments ............................................................................................... 5 
List of acronyms ................................................................................................ 13 
Assessment and recommendations .................................................................. 21 
Chapter 1. Human capital development, labour market and skills .............. 52 
Introduction ..................................................................................................... 53 
1.1. Tertiary education expansion ................................................................... 55 
1.2. Quality and relevance of tertiary education ............................................. 70 
1.3. Lifelong learning and reskilling and upskilling........................................ 76 
1.4. Strategic co-ordination: Creating linkages between foreign direct 
investors and local industry entrepreneurs ...................................................... 84 
1.5. A potential crisis of supply for university research and teaching capacity
 ......................................................................................................................... 87 
Conclusions and recommendations ................................................................. 89 
Annex 1.A1 Tertiary education institutions in Sonora, 2011-2012 ............... 96 
Annex 1.A2. Technical institutes’ enrolment and graduation figures 
in Mexico ............................................................................................................ 98 
References ........................................................................................................ 101 
Chapter 2. Research, development and innovation ..................................... 105 
Introduction ................................................................................................... 106 
2.1 Sonora’s tertiary education potential ....................................................... 107 
2.2 Challenges ............................................................................................... 113 
Conclusions and recommendations ............................................................... 126 
References ........................................................................................................ 132 
Chapter 3. Social, cultural and environmental development ...................... 135 
Introduction ................................................................................................... 136 
HIGHER EDUCATION IN REGIONAL AND CITY DEVELOPMENT: SONORA, MEXICO − © OECD 2013
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 – TABLE OF CONTENTS 
 
 
3.1 TEIs and social inclusion ........................................................................ 137 
3.2 Promotion of environmental sustainability ............................................. 145 
3.3 Benchmarking with international experience .......................................... 151 
Conclusions and recommendations ............................................................... 156 
Annex 3.A.1. Indigenous people in Sonora ................................................... 162 
Annex 3.A.2. ITSON’s arts and cultural programme .................................. 164 
References ........................................................................................................ 165 
Chapter 4: Globalisation and internationalisation ...................................... 169 
Introduction ................................................................................................... 170 
4.1 Mexico and Sonora in context ................................................................. 171 
4.2 Internationalisation and the state education policy ................................. 177 
4.3 Internationalisation of Sonora’s tertiary education sector ....................... 183 
Conclusions and recommendations ............................................................... 206 
Chapter 5. Capacity building for regional development ............................. 217 
Introduction ................................................................................................... 218 
5.1 Sonora’s governance structure and TE system ........................................ 219 
5.2 Sonora’s TEIs and their regional engagement......................................... 225 
5.3 Policy environment for TEIs ................................................................... 235 
Conclusions and recommendations ............................................................... 254 
Annex 5.A.1. Federal funding for TEIs ......................................................... 259 
References ........................................................................................................ 260 
Annex A. Review team .................................................................................... 267 
Annex B. The review visit agenda .................................................................. 271 
 
 
Tables 
Table  1.1.  Percentage  of  population  with  tertiary  education, 
municipalities of Sonora by age group (2010) ........................................... 62 
Table 2.1. Scimago ranking of selected universities in Mexico and 
Arizona (2012) ......................................................................................... 109 
Table 2.2. Specialty areas of principle TEIs in Sonora ................................. 112 
Table  4.1.  Global  competitiveness,  knowledge  economy  and 
globalisation indices ................................................................................ 173 
HIGHER EDUCATION IN REGIONAL AND CITY DEVELOPMENT: SONORA, MEXICO − © OECD 2013