Source: PA Photos
Equal treatment: segregation is still the subject of heated debate on campus
Students elected to represent women and diversity issues are divided about whether gender-segregated events should be allowed on campus, a 糖心Vlog survey suggests.
Asked if they would support student societies asking for segregation based on a variety of factors, including gender, less than half of the 17 respondents said that such requests should always be refused.
The issue came to the fore recently when Universities UK published advice suggesting that a religious speaker鈥檚 freedom of expression might be infringed if a request for gender segregation were not accommodated.
糖心Vlog
Some respondents to the THE survey expressed concern that criticism of gender segregation could be oppressive to minority groups.
Joe Killen, welfare and diversity officer at the students鈥 union for Goldsmiths, University of London, cited segregation鈥檚 importance in political movements. 鈥淚t would be inappropriate of us to say that our students do not have the right to draw the parameters of the spaces they need,鈥 he said. 鈥淔urther, it is dangerous to civil liberties in the UK to deny right to assembly for certain campus groups based on their members鈥 shared minority status.鈥
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Replying to the survey on behalf of the women鈥檚 officer at King鈥檚 College London Students鈥 Union, Shaheen Sattar, a National Union of Students delegate, said the 鈥渟tench of Islamophobia鈥 had been 鈥渕asked with feminism鈥 in politicians鈥 criticisms of gender segregation.
鈥淭he fact is, gender segregation is firm to the principles of Islam, and should be respected, if not tolerated, in institutes of higher education,鈥 she said.
However, Danielle Garrett, women鈥檚 officer at Glasgow Caledonian University Students鈥 Association, was among those who felt that any request for segregation would be hard to justify: 鈥淎 society represents a university, and as a public institution it should treat everyone equally and聽give everyone聽the same opportunities.鈥
Alice Phillips, women鈥檚 officer for the University of Bristol Students鈥 Union, agreed. 鈥淚f men or women voluntarily choose to segregate themselves, that is different鈥ut societies should not have a formalised policy of segregation,鈥 she said.
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Many respondents were also keen to point out non-religious scenarios in which they felt segregation was necessary.
鈥淥ur feminist society, whose committee I聽sat on last year, sometimes holds women-only events, and I feel this is a really important right鈥s there are issues women may only feel comfortable raising in the presence of other women,鈥 said Clopin Meehan, gender equality officer at the University of Glasgow Students鈥 Representative Council.
An NUS spokesman said it 鈥渟upports the rights of groups to self-organise鈥 but 鈥渃ertainly鈥 did not endorse enforced segregation.
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