Monthly Archives: February 2018

Call for Papers: UK Student Movement Research Project – ‘Protestival’ University of Sussex

UK Student Movement Research Project // 1st Symposium

As part of Sussex University’s Protestival // 20 – 22 April // University of Sussex, U.K.

Call for Papers and Panels

The 2010 protests and occupations against tuition fees reignited the student movement in the UK on a scale not seen since the late 1960s. A generation of young people and students organised in their universities and colleges, worked inside the National Union of Students, and campaigned outside of the national union too. There was an attempt to set up a separate anarchist student union at the end of 2012, and a student occupation at University of Sussex in support of staff fighting against privatisation in early 2013. The Sussex occupation organised its own national demonstration that drew student activists from across the country. Heavy police repression at the University of London led to the formation of the Cops Off Campus campaign, and resistance to border controls took place through organisations such as Universities Resist Border Controls. There has been renewed interest in feminist and LGBT+ activism, and efforts to question colonialism in our curricula.

Parallel to this wave of activism is the work done by researchers of the student movement. Bringing both closer together and learning from each other is essential for better understanding the student movement and to meet the challenges of the coming years. The UK Student Movement Research Project was set up in January 2017 to connect those interested or active in research on the student movement. The people involved come from a variety of academic and activist backgrounds, and research in a variety of different disciplines.

The 1st Symposium of the UK Student Movement Research Project will be held at the University of Sussex 20th – 22nd April. We welcome contributions on any aspect of the student movement in the UK, but also student movements around the world and analyses from transnational and global perspectives. These can have a contemporary or a historical focus.

Proposals are welcome for individual papers, as well as for panels drawing together 2-3 papers around a common theme. We are also interested in inviting those whose research presentation involves creative practices or a workshop based approach. Alternative spaces will be available for presentations, and if you have an interesting space on Sussex campus that would like to use then please let us know.

Contributions can be from academics, independent researchers and from student activists themselves. While the anti-fees protests are an integral part of the movement’s recent past so papers on this would be very welcome, we are especially interested in topics that have thus far been neglected in academic and political discourses. We are also interested in papers that link the student movement to other social, political, emancipatory and cultural movements.

Please submit your abstracts of no more than 300 words to us in the form below.

https://goo.gl/forms/XWCkvnDuUNEq1pmk2

Deadline for abstracts: 16 March 2018

 

The UK Student Movement Research Project’s symposium will be in collaboration with the University of Sussex Students’ Union Protestival, which celebrates a milestone of 50 years of student activism since May 1968. This will be a three day festival of speaker and panel events, workshops, music, comedy. The festival will look at the legacy of student activism and also, where things are at today. As well as presenting papers as a part of the symposium there will also be opportunities to get involved either as a participant or as an audience member in other events throughout the festival weekend.

If you have an idea for a related event that falls outside the symposium brief, please get in touch with Steph Cassin in the University of Sussex Students’ Union Events team. Her contact is steph.c@sussexstudent.com

The festival will be happening 20th-22nd April but the earlier you let us know your idea, the more time we will have to make your event a reality and as successful as possible.

While the Research Project has no direct funds with which to support travel and accommodation costs, opportunities to find cheap shared accommodation will be provided.

Unionising the Future: A Joint History of Trade Unions and Students’ Unions – Research Volunteers Required

Could your knowledge and experiences contribute to a history of joint working between Trade Unions and Students’ Unions?

Opportunities are currently available to participate in a project that tracks the history of interactions between Trade Unions and Students’ Unions from 1970 onwards.  Your experience of joint working between these organisations could contribute to the narrative of a currently unwritten history.  This may include policy that governs joint working, joined up working on campaigns, protests, consultations, casework, direct action, or any other areas you have experience of.  This project is seeking perspectives on where things have worked well, where they have been difficult, and in your thoughts about the future of joint working between these partners.

Participants may be current, or past officers, stewards, staff or volunteers working at Trade Unions or Students’ Unions, or in other HE Sector organisations.  You will be required to take part in a one hour recorded interview reflecting on your own experiences.  This interview will focus on your personal experience and observations in relation to the topic and you will be required to do no prior work or research on the matter.

If you are interested in participating, please complete this online contact form and we will be in touch shortly: https://goo.gl/forms/bQoamscNQ4YWZuWT2

 

This research is being conducted by Heather McKnight, a PhD student at the University of

Sussex funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council funding consortium CHASE (Consortium for the Humanities and Arts South- East England). This research has been approved by the Social Sciences & Arts Cluster Research Ethics Committee at the University of Sussex. 

Any information provided is confidential, no information disclosed will lead to the identification of any individual in the reports on the project, either by the researcher or by any other party. Personal information will be treated as strictly confidential and handled in accordance with the Data Protection Act 1998.