The University and College Union is mounting further strike action over job losses at the University of Sussex 鈥 but has suspended action at King鈥檚 College London after management agreed to review planned cuts.
UCU members at Sussex have agreed to strike on 18 June and 21 June, as a dispute over the university鈥檚 plans for about 100 job losses continues.
The union, which also held strikes in March and May, added: 鈥淔urther targeted industrial action by both academic and academic-related staff, aimed at fundamentally disrupting the administration of examination boards, will be announced in the coming weeks.鈥
Sussex UCU is also balloting its members over plans to implement an academic boycott against the university, which the union described as the 鈥渦ltimate sanction鈥.
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That would see the UCU calling on academics to observe measures such as not giving lectures at Sussex and not applying for jobs there.
Sussex鈥檚 council has approved plans to make 107 staff redundant in a bid to save about 拢5 million a year. Since the council鈥檚 decision, about 80 staff have agreed to accept voluntary severance packages. Strikes over job cuts have been held at Sussex, King鈥檚 and the University of Westminster this year.
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Sussex says that in most areas, it expects to "achieve change without any compulsory redundancies鈥 and that strike action 鈥渃alled by one trade union does not influence our approach nor does it offer positive ways ahead鈥.
But at King鈥檚, the UCU has now suspended industrial action after the college agreed to review the consultation it mounted over its plans to cut 205 jobs.
The college said there would be no compulsory redundancies during the four-month review.
Jim Wolfreys, UCU president at King鈥檚, said: 鈥淲e have achieved what we set out to do at the start of the dispute.鈥
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King鈥檚 says in a statement that it has agreed with the UCU 鈥渁 set of measures including a change management protocol and redeployment policy which enables the union鈥檚 concerns to be addressed whilst allowing King鈥檚 to continue to focus on reducing cost and protecting quality though its restructuring programme鈥.
Ian Creagh, college secretary and director of administration, said: 鈥淲e are pleased to have found common ground with the UCU and come to an agreement which is in the best interests of our students and staff.鈥
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