Middlesex University鈥檚 philosophy research centre may be 鈥渢ransferred鈥 to Kingston University after it was threatened with closure under controversial plans.
The Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy (CRMEP) could relaunch at Kingston in September. Its four senior staff and MA and PhD students would also transfer.
The football-style transfer is thought to have been negotiated between Kingston鈥檚 management and Middlesex鈥檚 philosophy staff.
A joint statement from the two universities says: 鈥淢iddlesex and Kingston universities have been in discussions over the transfer of postgraduate philosophy programmes and research, plus associated staff, from Middlesex to Kingston. Those discussions are at an advanced stage and neither institution is able to comment further at this point.鈥
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Middlesex was hit by a barrage of criticism from academics around the world last month when it announced that it would phase out all undergraduate and postgraduate teaching and research in philosophy, citing low undergraduate numbers.
Many concluded that the CRMEP, Middlesex鈥檚 highest-rated department in the 2008 research assessment exercise, would also close.
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The CRMEP鈥檚 annual quality-related (QR) research funding of about 拢170,000 is unlikely to follow the unit in the transfer. It is thought that Kingston would have to provide financing itself, with Middlesex continuing to be eligible for the QR cash despite no longer paying staff salaries.
Two professors and a senior lecturer at the CRMEP 鈥 Peter Osborne, Peter Hallward and Christian Kerslake 鈥 are scheduled to appear before disciplinary hearings at Middlesex on 9 June following claims by the university that they were involved in student protests against the course closures.
Professor Osborne, director of the CRMEP, said of the potential transfer: 鈥淲hat鈥檚 important from our point of view is that it demonstrates it is not impossible to have research-based philosophy in a post-1992 institution.鈥
He argued that institutions at the forefront of widening participation must offer subjects such as philosophy to ensure those disciplines are open to students from outside 鈥渙ne particular social class鈥.
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Professor Osborne also said that Kingston鈥檚 willingness to host the CRMEP showed that course closures in some disciplines are not an inevitable consequence of higher education鈥檚 funding problems.
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