InQuire 17.6

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InQuire The University of Kent’s student publication

www.inquiremedia.org

Gift ideas, NYE & more: Christmas Special

Friday 3 December 2021 17.6

Natale on the other side of the Channel Culture: Page 16

Lifestyle: Page 5-7

Kent Union votes to Support our Striking Lecturers By Alex Charilaou, Newspaper Editor

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President Claire Hurley, who spoke about the reasons staff are on strike this week and why student solidarity is important. She was followed by Kent Union President Aisha Dosanjh, who explained that Kent’s student representatives had voted overwhelmingly to support staff on the picket line. Other speakers included members of CCCU UCU, Kent Union VicePresident (Academic Experience) Lupe Sellei and the Chair of DemocratiseUKC, who spoke of the importance of studentstaff solidarity. There were further events throughout Wednesday and Thursday. Kent Union’s position of supporting this week’s strikes was arrived at after consultations between Kent Union, UCU and university management, as well as a series of student forums which took place in November. A recording of the 24th of November student forum can be found on Kent Union’s Instagram page. Postgraduate UCU member Anamika Misra

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ent Union Parliament passed a motion which commits Kent Union to supporting University and College Union (UCU) strike action from 1st – 3rd December. 13 members voted to support strike action, while 4 members voted against and 3 abstained. UCU are striking as part of two national disputes. One dispute is about planned cuts to the university staff national pension scheme – UCU claims this cut might amount to over 40% of the current pensions rate in real terms. The other dispute concerns UCU’s Four Fights campaign. Four Fights is challenging falling pay, precarious employment practises, unmanageable workloads, and inequalities in the higher education sector: problems echoed by staff disputes at Kent. At the University of Kent, both the pensions ballot and Four Fights ballot for strike action received 53.4% turnout – over 50% turnout is the legal requirement needed for a workforce to begin strike action. The ‘Yes’ vote at Kent for the national pensions dispute was 79% in favour of strike action, around 3% over the national average. The ‘Yes’ vote for Four Fights strike action was 75%, which is 5% higher than the national average. Kent UCU will join 36 others across the country in undertaking strike action: tens of thousands of university staff across the UK are likely to be on strike this week. The strike opened on Wednesday with a series of pickets held by schools and divisions, followed by a larger march and rally at 10am. After a loud, well-attended march from Plaza, a number of people were invited to speak outside Registry – the location of the Vice-Chancellor’s office. The first speaker was Kent UCU Branch

presented the reasoning behind strike action, and university management was represented by Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Education and Student Experience) Richard Reece and Deputy Human Resources Director Nikki Hyde. Hyde said in her presentation that some exceptional circumstances required precarious contracts. When InQuire asked Hyde which circumstances she referred to, she responded that some reasons they’ve been used are legitimate, and some have been because “they’re the easiest thing to pick off the shelf”. Exceptional circumstances Hyde listed which she argued required precarious contracts included temporary cover, maternity cover and one-off events. InQuire asked if this meant the university would commit to eliminating precarious contracts outside of these circumstances in the medium term, to which Hyde responded with the following: “in the medium term, we need to review how they’re being used”, before speaking about coming to an arrangement with Kent staff. Zaid Mahmood – Chair of the Activities Network and KU Parliament member – told InQuire why he felt it was necessary to vote for supporting these strikes: “Our teaching staff deserve better

from the uni because if they are overworked and underpaid, students won’t get the education that they deserve and pay for. I supported the motion because I believe that the teaching staff had the right to strike to get the university to listen to their demands.” Another motion was presented to Kent Union Parliament in November: the foundation of a Medway Students’ Network. This motion was rejected by Kent Union Parliament. InQuire spoke to Thomas Freeston – a postgraduate representative on KU Parliament, and student representative on the University of Kent Council – about this motion, which he proposed. “I study at the Medway Business School. I know there isn’t the same support or representation as there is in Canterbury. There are currently networks for a range of marginalised communities: I thought having a Medway Network would be a great platform for Medway students.” We asked Thomas why he suspected the motion was rejected: “I was quite surprised – there was nothing controversial or bad about the idea, just more representation for a community which doesn’t often get it necessarily. I’m glad to have started a conversation about better representation for Medway. Even though this door has closed, it’s opened up more opportunities to fight for Medway’s voice.” Kent Union Parliament decided to invoke a KU by-law which allows Parliament to hold a secret ballot. The 25th November session practised such a ballot: in practise, this means students cannot know how their individual elected representatives voted. As an anonymous third-year student told InQuire, “what kind of functioning democracy works in the shadows? We should know how our representatives are voting, and even if they bother to turn up. Simple as”. InQuire will cover industrial action updates throughout 2022.

Feature: Pages 12-13

It's time toNews be Page 2 honest about Kent's history Entertainment: of slavery Pages 18-19 Satire Page 20

The Grinch speaks out: Why I stole Christmas

Magnetars & Strangeness: An Astrophysics Mystery Science & Technology Page 14

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Sport: page 24 it's ole over: social media's effect on manager sackings


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