Protesters say students, academics and university staff from around the country will join them on 25 March, with a number of student unions laying on transport for the demonstration.
At the time of writing, almost 800 people on the social networking site Facebook had said they would attend the event.
It comes as an occupation of Sussexâs Bramber House conference centre in protest at plans to outsource 235 estates and catering jobs approaches its seventh week.
The occupation has received political support, with Caroline Lucas, Green MP for Brighton Pavilion, tabling an Early Day Motion in Parliament on university outsourcing and the plans at Sussex.
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The motion, tabled on 19 March and so far also signed by Ms Lucas and five Labour MPs, shares occupiers concerns about third-party providers being contracted to undertake university services and at the governmentâs âpromotion of the commercialisation of the higher education sectorâ.
According to the occupiers, academics at Sussex are also increasingly getting behind their efforts.
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In a message on their Facebook page, academics in Sussexâs department of anthropology say they will âendeavour to make appropriate adjustments to teaching schedulesâ in order to allow students who are taking part in the protest to remain engaged in their coursework.
They also say they support the occupationâs âcourageous effortsâ and share the studentsâ scepticism that outsourcing would genuinely provide better quality services.
Meanwhile the relationship between university management and some students remains fractious after a protester was deemed to be in breach of disciplinary rules for sending an âabusiveâ email to a member of university management.
The message, which also expressed the studentâs concerns over the outsourcing plans, suggested a managerâs job title might be changed to âdirector of corporate tyranny and human sufferingâ.
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At a hearing on 4 March the student was told he faced a ÂŁ100 fine after declining to apologise. However, the punishment has since been changed to attending a one-to-one seminar with an academic on âethical lines relating to the boundaries of âfair commentâ in polemical communicationsâ.
A spokesman for the university told Times Higher Education that it was the universityâs aim to âimprove services to staff and students through identifying high-quality external partners for catering and facilities management as we grow [in student numbers]â.
âWe continue to have positive discussions with trades unions, including in relation to future pension provision for transferring staff. We are supporting transferring staff through [one-to-one] meetings and information sessions,â he added.
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