About

The Stop the Cuts campaign formed in response to plans by the university administration to cut back on spending by millions in the next few years. The university is planning to cut £3 million this academic year, and £5 million next year.

The costs of these cuts will be passed on to schools through restructuring and course closures, and to staff and students in the shape of job losses, pensions cuts and fee increases. However at the same time as proposing these cuts, the university administration is planning to spend £112 million on new buildings and refurbishments on campus, as well as raising the salaries of the top 14 managers to a combined £2.1 million per year.

If they take place, the cuts proposed by the administration could fundamentally change the university as an environment for learning, teaching and working. For students and academic staff, the cuts will undermine the university as a place that recognizes the inherent value of academic knowledge and research. As the costs of the spending cuts are passed on to schools, the way in which academic work and research is evaluated will be changed to orient schools towards areas that produce the most income for the university. Research will only be encouraged if it is business driven or funded by external bodies,. Education at Sussex will be subordinated to the interests of business.

This will not only mean that courses will be simplified as research is steered in more lucrative directions, but will also put areas that don’t provide enough income at risk of cuts, dramatic restructuring and closures. Engineering and Design, Life Sciences, and Informatics have already been identified as schools that, as they are failing to make money, are under immediate threat.

For academic staff at Sussex these changes mean they will be put in to competition with their colleagues to try and defend their area of research. Individual academics will be at risk of losing their jobs if their research does not attract income. Both academic staff and other employees of the university are being threatened with job losses and pension cuts.

The Stop the Cuts campaign demands that the university administration makes no compulsory redundancies and resists student fees and cuts in higher education spending. It argues for the reining in of executive pay, the postponement of new building projects, and the protection of academic freedom.

Everyone who studies or works at Sussex needs to challenge these decisions that are being made on our behalf to ask whether millions of pounds of new buildings and managerial salaries are worth the cost of our courses, jobs and pensions.

Further Information:

What is happening to US

Our Campaign Demands Oct 2009

Badger summary of cuts so far (see page 4)

The ‘Other’ Cuts at Sussex article Jan 2010

part 2 proposals

Proposals parts 1 and 3

Departmental counter-proposals and management response March 2010

6 Responses to About

  1. [...] been a crazy few weeks with management’s recent Proposals taking up everyone’s time, but I’m gonna take this opportunity give an update on the [...]

  2. I am unable to sign your petition despite trying repeated because ‘the website is down’ However, I am forwarding to UCU contacts plus Greenwich Uni SU.
    Patrick Ainley
    Professor of Training and Education
    School of Education and Training
    University of Greenwich

  3. Mostafa says:

    I want to see If we can interview any one in this mater.
    Farsnews agency
    Iran
    00989125705093

  4. damian says:

    don’t allow this cause to be used by iranian state media to showcase the problems in education within western democracies. why don’t you interview the oppressed women, homosexuals and members of the green movement mustafa? Or wait, you can’t I forgot your “news” is the mouthpiece of the “supreme leader” in iran.

  5. m4trix87 says:

    Don’t know which is worse
    Capitalism(profit is god)
    or
    Fundamentalism?

    The first is devoid of ethics.
    The second is devoid of logic.

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