In a landmark move for higher education and industry collaboration in the United Arab Emirates, the Sharjah Commerce and Tourism Development Authority (SCTDA)—commonly referred to as the Sharjah Tourism Authority—and the American University of Sharjah (AUS) have formalized a strategic partnership through a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU). Signed on April 9, 2026, at the prestigious House of Wisdom in Sharjah, this alliance aims to propel tourism innovation while equipping students with cutting-edge skills for the evolving sector. The partnership bridges academia and government, fostering an ecosystem where young talent can address real-world challenges in sustainable tourism, artificial intelligence (AI)-driven experiences, and destination management.
The MoU was inked by His Excellency Khalid Jasim Al Midfa, Chairman of SCTDA, and Dr. Tod Laursen, Chancellor of AUS, in the presence of senior officials. This collaboration aligns with the visionary leadership of His Highness Sheikh Dr. Sultan bin Mohammed Al Qasimi, Member of the UAE Supreme Council and Ruler of Sharjah, emphasizing cultural preservation alongside forward-thinking development. For AUS students, particularly those in computer science, engineering, and business administration, it opens doors to practical projects that blend technology with tourism, enhancing employability in a sector projected to contribute significantly to the UAE's non-oil economy.
Building on Proven Success: The 2025 Sharjah Tourism Innovation Hackathon
The foundation of this partnership rests on the resounding success of the inaugural Sharjah Tourism Innovation Hackathon held November 1-2, 2025, at AUS. Jointly organized by SCTDA and AUS's Department of Computer Science, the event drew over 500 undergraduate students from 29 UAE universities. From these, 80 participants formed cross-disciplinary teams, tackling themes like smart and sustainable tourism.
Teams developed prototypes using AI, machine learning (ML), web development, and blockchain over 48 intense hours. A panel of academics and industry experts judged entries on problem clarity, relevance to Sharjah, scalability, innovation, and presentation. Highlights included:
- First Place (AED 20,000 + SITTF presentation): Team Hayyakum's 'Sharjah Quest'—an augmented reality (AR) gamified app with digital passports, mascots, itineraries, and challenges to explore museums, souqs, heritage sites, and local businesses.
- Second Place (AED 15,000): Team Nomad's coral reef health monitoring system using underwater vibrations for marine conservation and tourism showcasing.
- Third Place (AED 10,000): Team trail/s from Ajman University's unified accessibility platform, integrating tourism, law, and biomedical tech for travelers with disabilities.
HE Al Midfa praised the event as a platform shaping tourism's future, while Dr. Imran Zualkernan, AUS faculty, highlighted students' rapid application of tech skills. This hackathon not only generated actionable ideas but demonstrated AUS students' prowess, paving the way for the new MoU. 
Core Pillars of the SCTDA-AUS Strategic Partnership
The MoU outlines a multifaceted framework to nurture tourism talent. Key pillars include:
- Annual Hackathon Delivery: Co-designed and hosted at AUS alongside the Sharjah International Travel and Tourism Forum (SITTF), ensuring student innovations reach industry stakeholders.
- Research and Knowledge Exchange: Collaborative projects in destination marketing, tourism management, and sustainable practices, leveraging AUS's research strengths.
- Executive Education and Professional Development: Tailored programs for industry professionals and AUS faculty to upskill in emerging trends like AI in hospitality.
- Student Engagement and Immersion: Internships, industry visits, and mentorships connecting AUS learners with SCTDA's ecosystem.
HE Al Midfa emphasized, "This collaboration creates an enabling environment for innovation, advancing knowledge and nurturing talent capable of leading the sector." Dr. Laursen added that it delivers "real value for Sharjah" through talent development and applied knowledge.
Empowering AUS Students: Skill Development in Tourism Innovation
For AUS's 5,500+ students, this partnership translates theory into practice. Participants in the 2025 hackathon honed skills in rapid prototyping, interdisciplinary teamwork, and tech integration—essential for tourism careers. 'Sharjah Quest,' for instance, combined AR, gamification, and data analytics to boost visitor dwell time and support SMEs, aligning with UAE Vision 2031.
AUS's College of Engineering and School of Business Administration (SBA) stand to benefit most. Engineering students apply AI/ML to tourism challenges, while SBA learners explore management and marketing. The Center for Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Sustainable Development (CEISD) at AUS will amplify this by guiding ideas to market. Students gain portfolios showcasing real-impact projects, boosting resumes for roles in hospitality tech, sustainable tourism consulting, and digital destination planning.
Step-by-step, the hackathon process mirrors industry workflows: problem identification, ideation, prototyping, pitching—preparing graduates for global firms like Marriott or tech giants entering tourism.
Sharjah's Tourism Boom: Context and Growth Statistics
Sharjah's tourism sector provides fertile ground. In 2024, the emirate welcomed 1.6 million hotel guests, up 11% from 2023. Preliminary 2025 data shows 38% growth, driven by cultural events like the Sharjah Light Festival (1.2 million visitors in 2024). SCTDA's initiatives, including AI assistants in 40 languages and roadshows in India and China, position Sharjah as a cultural hub amid UAE's 15% GDP tourism contribution in 2025.
The partnership addresses skill gaps: UAE tourism needs 500,000 jobs by 2031, per government reports. AUS graduates, trained in innovation, will fill high-value roles. For details on Sharjah's stats, see the SCTDA insights page.
Broader Impacts on UAE Higher Education Landscape
This MoU exemplifies UAE's push for industry-academia synergy. AUS, accredited by SACSCOC and MSCHE, joins peers like NYU Abu Dhabi in experiential learning. It supports National Strategy for Higher Education 2030, emphasizing employability (UAE graduate employment at 85%+). Similar models: Khalifa University's RF-GPT AI project; Zayed University's wellbeing focus.
Stakeholder perspectives vary: Students like Mahmoud Darwish (Hayyakum) value real-world application; faculty see research funding; SCTDA gains fresh ideas. Challenges include scaling prototypes, addressed via MoU's implementation focus.
Case Studies: Winning Innovations and Their Potential
Delve into winners:
- Sharjah Quest: AR app spreads footfall, integrates SMEs—potential 20-30% dwell time increase per pilot data.
- Nomad Reef Monitor: Vibration tech protects biodiversity, enables eco-tours—aligns with Sharjah's marine reserves.
- Trail/s Platform: AI recommendations for accessibility, promoting inclusive tourism (10%+ global market).
HE Al Midfa noted promising AUS ideas for ground implementation, signaling real deployment. 
Future Outlook: Annual Events and Long-Term Ecosystem
2026 promises the second hackathon, expanded with more universities. Long-term: Curriculum integration at AUS, joint R&D labs, alumni networks. Projections: Train 1,000+ students yearly, spawn 50+ startups by 2030. Aligns with UAE's Dh257 billion tourism revenue target.
Actionable insights for students: Join AUS clubs like AIMS for event skills; pursue CEISD mentorship; target hackathon for internships. Faculty: Propose SCTDA-funded projects.
Stakeholder Perspectives and Challenges Ahead
Industry views SCTDA-AUS as talent pipeline booster. Dr. Salah Brahimi (AUS) stressed connecting innovations to priorities. Challenges: Tech adoption barriers, funding—mitigated via government backing. Multi-perspective: Emirati students prioritize sustainability; internationals bring global views.
For comprehensive hackathon recap, visit AUS's event page.
Implications for Careers in UAE Tourism Higher Education
This partnership elevates UAE higher ed's role in economic diversification. AUS grads enter booming sector: Hospitality management roles (avg. AED 15,000/month entry), tourism tech specialists (AED 20,000+). Prepares for global trends like metaverse tours, blockchain bookings.
Concrete examples: Hackathon alumni fast-tracked to SCTDA internships. Broader: Enhances UAE's QS rankings via applied research output.
Photo by Saj Shafique on Unsplash
