Oxford University Student Union
The Oxford University Student Union is the official student government of the University of Oxford. It is better known in Oxford by its acronym, OUSU. It exists to represent Oxford students in University decision-making, to act as the voice of students in the national higher education policy debate, and to provide direct services to the student body. It is not to be confused with the Oxford Union Society, which though similarly named is an entirely separate organisation.
Structure
Reflecting the federated nature of the University of Oxford itself, OUSU is both an association of Oxford's 16500 individual students, and a federation of the Junior Common Rooms (JCRs) and University of Oxford's nascent student union emerged in the 13th century, as student leaders attempted to mediate the violent clashes between "nations" at the University. Southern English, northern English, Scottish, Welsh, and Irish students would frequently battle against one another, with fatalities recorded as early as 1260.
Despite this ancient pedigree, the University of Oxford's governing council resisted formally recognising Oxford's university-wide student estate for some 750 years, although JCRs and MCRs came to be recognised in their respective colleges during the 19th century.
In 1961, with France's Évenements du mai and the United States' anti-Vietnam war protests looming, the University Proctors banned the student magazine Isis from publishing reviews of lectures. Students resisted, and legally incorporated the Oxford University Student Representative Council (OUSRC) for the first time. They then agitated for formal university recognition of the OUSRC, and petitioned the United Kingdom's Privy Council, asking the government to amend the Oxford and Cambridge Universities Act. Rather than risk having its hand forced by legislation, the University relented, and formally recognised the OUSRC in 1970.
The OUSRC adopted its contemporary constitution in 1974, changing its name to the Oxford University Student Union.
Milestone Oxford presidents
- 1355 - The first true student president's name has been lost, and all that is known of him is that he was an undergraduate from the "northern English nation". He appeared during the St Scholastica Day Massacre, rallying Oxford students from the different "nations" of Britain together to defend the University, after riots erupted with townspeople that ultimately left hundreds of students dead and most colleges abandoned. He is sometimes also credited with leading students back to the University in the aftermath of the riots, but this is probably apocryphal.
- 1971 - Emily Wallace is elected OUSRC president, and is the first president of Oxford students to be officially recognised by the University.
- 1973 - Michael Sullivan becomes the first president of the new Oxford University Student Union.
- 1981 - Leslie Riddoch is elected OUSU's first female president, although there had been a substantial number of female presidents of the OUSRC and earlier incarnations of the student government.
- 1982 - John Grogan becomes the first president to succeed in obtaining a seat for students at the University's governing council, in June 1983. He and two other students chosen by OUSU become observers for most of the council's agenda, and this practice is enshrined in the University's Statutes, Decrees, and Regulations.
- 1993 - Akaash Maharaj becomes the first ever visible minority president and first president from overseas. He helps lead a successful national campaign against a 1994 government bill to restrict the ability of student unions to comment on public policy issues: the then Minister of Education is ultimately dismissed from Cabinet.
- 1997 - Simon McDougall helps lead a national campaign against government plans to introduce tuition fees. The campaign garners massive public attention and catapults OUSU into the public consciousness. Nevertheless, the government proceeds to introduce fees the following year.
- 1998 - Katherine Rainwood becomes the first president to be impeached. Caught cheating in her final exams, she is expelled from the University by the Proctors, and is therefore disqualified from the presidency, after holding the post for only two days.
See also