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Academics hatch plan to save disbanded research centre

History centre shut during University of Brighton cuts could continue as autonomous organisation

Published on
December 20, 2023
Last updated
December 20, 2023
Person holds the horse costume head in the annual pantomime horse race to illustrate Academics hatch plan to save disbanded research centre
Source: Alamy

Academics are hoping to keep the work of a renowned research centre going after it was disbanded by a university amid cutbacks.

Staff and alumni of the University of Brighton鈥檚 Centre for Memory, Narrative and Histories have started exploring ways to set up an autonomous organisation that will continue the centre鈥檚 scholarship and further the collaborations it established in its 15 years of operation.

CMNH is one of seven research centres closed by Brighton since May.聽At the same time, the university has enacted a聽, which saw more than 100 academic jobs cut.

Graham Dawson, a former professor of historical cultural studies at Brighton who was the founding director of the centre, said its 鈥渟hocking鈥 loss was indicative of the university 鈥渟hrinking its commitments鈥.

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Brighton shut its campus in neighbouring Hastings in 2019 and plans to close its Eastbourne site in 2024. The university-run Brighton Centre for Contemporary Art, a gallery that showcased the work of local and national artists, also closed in June.

Professor Dawson said聽similar situations聽were being replicated at institutions elsewhere and it was hoped their work could establish a model for university initiatives that are cut back. 鈥淭hose of us at the core of this are very clear that universities are pulling out of lots of activity,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e are going to have to create, more widely, some kind of structure that will enable this work to go on.鈥

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Founded in 2008, CMNH helped Brighton build a research culture from scratch, Professor Dawson said, functioning as a cross-university space that focused on thematic areas such as war and conflict, medical history and anti-racism.

He said it had also helped the university attract funding, expanding to accommodate 30 to 40 PhD students, and build connections with visiting scholars nationally and internationally.

The centre鈥檚 closure was mandated by senior leaders with little opportunity for consultation, said Professor Dawson, who retired in January but retains a link to the institution as a visiting research fellow.

A campaign group 鈥 Save CMNH 鈥 is calling for Brighton to reinstate the centre but has also begun exploring ways to ensure it can keep going in a new guise, and continue initiatives such as a long-running seminar series.

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鈥淥ur centre is more than just a university organisational structure or unit,鈥 said Professor Dawson. 鈥淚t is a research community with value and values and an ethos and purpose which continues to be necessary.

鈥淲e aren鈥檛 going to have it destroyed by some management fiat without any justification.鈥

He said that new models for the centre were only just starting to be explored, with options including setting up as a professional association or community interest company.

It was hoped the centre could secure funding from research bodies, trade unions or via crowdfunding.

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A University of Brighton spokesman said that it 鈥渞egularly review[ed]鈥 its research structures 鈥渢o deliver on our strategic priorities and further develop areas that make us distinctive as an institution鈥.

鈥淲e will continue to support research into memory, narrative and histories in other ways,鈥 he said.

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tom.williams@timeshighereducation.com

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