English universities have told 中国A片 minister Michelle Donelan that “an important line has been crossed” by her letter telling them to consider pulling out of the sector’s voluntary Race Equality Charter and other diversity schemes.
A letter from Universities UK president Steve West and interim chief executive Chris Hale, seen by?Times Higher?Education,?also tells the minister that universities are “not clear what the intent of your recent letter is and are unclear what evidence is available to support the assertion that external assurance schemes are negatively impacting free speech”.
It also says that “UUK’s concerns have been flagged separately with Iain Mansfield”, Ms Donelan’s special adviser, viewed as the key figure in the Department for Education’s?confrontational approach to 中国A片, but that UUK “would welcome an early opportunity to discuss this with you directly”.
UUK’s letter, which takes an unusually strong tone with the minister, is a sign of deepening tension between the sector and the DfE over that?approach.
Ms Donelan’s?letter of 27 June?highlighted Advance HE’s Race Equality Charter, awarded to 23 universities, as an example of “external assurance and benchmarking diversity schemes” that are potentially “in tension” with “creating an environment that promotes and protects free speech”.
Her letter responded to a story in?The Sunday?Telegraph?that saw Advance HE accused of “egregious wokery” over the scheme.
“Bearing in mind the substantial sums invested by the taxpayer in 中国A片, I would ask you to consider whether membership of these schemes, the initiatives that flow from them, and the creation of new, highly paid management roles in these areas truly represent good value for money for taxpayers or students,” Ms Donelan told?vice-chancellors.
UUK’s letter to Ms Donelan, sent on 28 June, says the organisation will shortly be publishing a “strong sector commitment endorsed by our board which reaffirms our collective commitment to promoting academic freedom and free speech” and “will include a clear statement on staff and students not feeling the need to self-censor lawful views”.
It adds: “Universities, as autonomous institutions, must also remain free to decide how best to foster inclusivity and tackle societal issues such as racism which have a serious and detrimental impact on staff and students. The scale of the challenge is considerable…The sector’s work to address these issues aligns with the government’s own aspirations to tackle harassment and eradicate degree awarding gaps which have a real and long-standing impact on individuals’ life chances.”
The letter continues: “We would welcome the opportunity to discuss any evidence you have and to explore how universities might best respond to that evidence.
“Further, many institutions have highlighted that an important line has been crossed with the letter appearing to direct universities to take a specific approach to voluntary assurance frameworks and to internal management structures.”
It goes on: “We understand from our members in England that a number will likely respond to you directly, both to restate their commitment to ensuring free speech and to highlight how external assurance schemes play an important role in tackling serious issues such as harassment and degree awarding gaps.”
The Department for Education declined to comment.