The college鈥檚 academic board voted this week in favour of a motion to halt the plans detailed in this summer鈥檚 White Paper on higher education.
Passed with an overwhelmingly majority, the motion says the plans could inflict 鈥済reat and irreversible damage to higher education in the UK鈥.
It follows similar votes at the universities of Oxford, Leeds and Bath earlier this year, in which academic boards declared they had no confidence in David Willetts as universities and science minister. A vote at the University of Cambridge finished in a dead-heat.
The vote on 16 November was welcome by Sally Hunt, general secretary of the University and College Union.
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鈥淭he government鈥檚 plans for higher education have been a complete mess from day one鈥, she said.
鈥淭he delayed White Paper finally came out after universities had set their fees for 2012 and has caused complete chaos鈥.
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A spokesman for Birkbeck said: 鈥淭he college acknowledges the strong feelings of the Birkbeck academic community that echo academic sentiment across the sector.
鈥淚t also recognises the government鈥檚 clear intention to create a level playing field for part-time students.鈥
He said that, as a college specialising in part-time provision, Birkbeck had lobbied successfully for the government to address the inequitable funding of part-time students.
鈥淚n 2012, for the first time, part-time students will be eligible for government loans and will not need to pay their fees in advance as they do now.
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鈥淢uch has been achieved but much remains to be done,鈥 the spokesman said.
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