Which universities are striking and why?
As part of a protracted dispute over salary and working conditions, lecturers and other university staff members across the UK will be on strike for five days starting today, September 25.
Numerous UK institutions' actions by the University and College Union (UCU) will fall during Freshers' Week for many first-year students.
Strike action has been called off at plenty of universities and many employers have agreed to end punitive pay deductions confirmed UCU. The union said the action will now be targeted at the very worst employers.
So, which universities are taking part and why are they striking?
Which universities are striking?
The majority of the strike action will occur over five days, from Monday, September 25, to Friday, September 29, 2023, while a few UCU branches may strike on additional or alternative days due to local conditions.
Here is the full list:
Birbeck, University of London
Bournemouth University
Brighton, University of - Currently undertaking indefinite strike action over local redundancies
Brunel University
Buckinghamshire New University
Dundee University - Striking on Monday 25 and Tuesday 26 September
Durham University - Striking on Tuesday 26 September
Edge Hill University
Edinburgh University
Glasgow University - Striking on Wednesday 27 September
Gloucester University - Striking on Monday 25 and Tuesday 26 September
Greenwich University
Harper Adams University
Heriot-Watt University
Keele University
Kingston University
Leeds University
Liverpool John Moores University
Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine
Liverpool University
London Metrpolitan University - Striking on Monday 25 and Tuesday 26 September
Manchester University
Open University
Oxford Brookes University - Striking on Wednesday 27 September
Oxford University
Plymouth Marjon University
Plymouth University - Striking on Monday 25 September
Queen Mary, University of London - Strike days are over punitive deductions for those who took part in the marking and assessment boycott (MAB)
Royal Academy of Music
Royal Agricultural University
Royal College of Art
Royal College of Music
Royal Holloway, University of London
Salford University
Sheffield University
South Wales University
Stranmillis University
Stratclyde University
Sussex University
Trinity Laban University
Ulster University
University College Birmingham
University for the Creative Arts
University of the Arts London
University of West England - Striking on Monday 25 and Tuesday 26 September
Westminster University - Striking on Monday 25 and Tuesday 26 September
Writtle University College
Why are universities striking?
As part of a protracted disagreement over compensation and working conditions, employees are taking action.
The UCU demands that businesses stop using zero-hours contracts and temporary contracts, as well as a salary increase equal to the RPI measure of inflation plus two per cent.
According to the Universities and Colleges Employers Association (UCEA), the revised pay agreement for 2023–24, valued five-eight per cent, was the biggest offer of its sort in almost 20 years.
Unions contend that this represents a pay decrease in real terms, and 56 per cent of voting UCU members chose to reject the offer.
Despite the refusal, the UCEA recommended that universities go ahead and retroactively apply the salary increase for 2023–24 in February.
The UCU asserts that it is optimistic that a separate pensions dispute will be settled, restoring lowered pension payments.
According to the UCEA employers' body's examination of data from the Higher Education Statistics Agency, the median income for a professor is approximately £80,000, while 25 per cent of professor salaries are at or below £70,000.