Scores of academic and professional service staff are facing redundancy after three UK universities announced their intention to shut courses and close departments.
In recent days, the University of Wolverhampton, De Montfort University and the University of Roehampton have all unveiled major cost-cutting programmes with job losses concentrated mostly in arts, humanities and social science subjects.
At Roehampton, 226 academics have been notified that their jobs are at risk in what the university called a âstrategic realignmentâ that will see cuts to its philosophy, anthropology, Classics and creative writing programmes.
One academic at Roehampton described the proposed cuts as ââ. âThis is effectively dismantling what had become one of the best modern universities in the region,â said Lia Betti, senior lecturer in evolutionary anthropology, on Twitter.
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In a statement, Roehampton said it would âanticipate a net reduction of around 64Â full-time equivalent academic posts overallâ as a result of âstudent demand evolvingâ.
âWe are also facing financial challenges due to a range of factors, including caps on regulated tuition fees, removal of the âLondon weightingâ element of the teaching grant, rises in costs, liabilities and inflation,â a spokeswoman said.
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âWe will be consulting on ceasing new enrolments to a small number of courses which have experienced a significant fall in demand, and we are also launching new career-focussed courses across all our academic departments," she added.
Wolverhampton has recruitment to 138 undergraduate and taught postgraduate courses. Among the 47 courses in performing arts being âpausedâ for enrolment are music, drama and acting and audio technology, its local University and College Union branch .
That decision was taken because âenrolments have been falling with associated loss of incomeâ while costs have âsignificantly increasedâ, explained interim vice-chancellor Ian Campbell.
âThe reduction in student income, combined with increases in pay and non-pay costs including pension costs, alongside the impact of the pandemic, means the university is facing a very challenging financial landscape and a significant deficit in the current financial year,â said Professor Campbell. The university has instigated a voluntary severance scheme as part of its ârobust recovery planâ, he added.
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Wolverhampton said it was seeking to âconsolidateâ some courses after a review that looked at application data, graduate employment results and student satisfaction.
At De Montfort, the university said it anticipated a ânet reduction of 58Â roles across academic and professional servicesâ, with âthe removal of some posts but, in some cases, the introduction of new rolesâ.
The were the consequence of âreduced student numbers as a result of the global pandemic and teacher assessed gradesâ, which have âhad a profound effect on our budgetâ, a spokesman said.
âHaving already implemented a comprehensive set of measures including voluntary severance, we are left with having to make the hardest decision we could and review staffing costs, which may result in reductions to posts and redundancies,â he said.
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