Students taking legal action against Chichester university
The students are taking the action after the uni suspended the black history course
Last updated 21st Feb 2024
A group of students have engaged lawyers to pursue legal action against a university alleging discrimination and breach of contract after it "suspended" a black history degree for new applicants.
The 14 students were all studying on the Masters by Research (MRes), History of Africa and the African Diaspora course or conducting research for a PhD at the University of Chichester when it made the decision to halt the programme for newcomers in July 2023 because of the costs of running the course.
The university also made the course leader Professor Hakim Adi, the first African-British historian to become a professor of history in the UK and who was shortlisted for the Wolfson History Prize in 2023, redundant.
The students have gone through the university's internal complaints procedure "without resolution" for their claim that the departure of Prof Adi has left them without adequate supervision to complete their studies.
A university spokeswoman said that the claims made on behalf of the students were "inaccurate and misleading".
She said: "For clarity, the MRes programme referred to has not been 'terminated' for existing students but is only suspended to new applicants pending a review.
"PhD students study individual programmes of research and should not be conflated with the MRes programme.
"The university is committed to ensuring that all existing students are able to complete their studies successfully and that alternative teaching and supervisory arrangements are in place for these students."
'Their studies have been completely disrupted'
Prof Adi said: "As a result of the MRes we encouraged many more black students to embark on PhD research.
"We established one of the largest cohorts of black postgraduate history students in the country.
"As a result of the measures taken by the University of Chichester, these students have been left without appropriate supervision and their studies have been completely disrupted."
Jabari Osaze, a MRes student said: "Chichester university should have focused its efforts on recruiting more students like me but instead it seems they undervalued the programme.
"They have treated their students and the world-renowned expert historian who ran the programme extremely poorly.
"They are now offering academic support to MRes students' guidance by scholars who are not trained in the history of Africa and the African diaspora.
"It has been painful to be disregarded in this manner."