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Cambridge Students' Union

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromCambridge University Students' Union)
Representative body for students at the University of Cambridge
Not to be confused withCambridge Union.

Cambridge Students' Union
InstitutionUniversity of Cambridge
LocationStudents' Union, 3rd Floor University Centre, Granta Pl, Mill Lane,Cambridge, CB2 1RU
Established
  • 1971 (asCSU, laterCUSU)
  • 2020 (asCambridge SU)
Sabbatical officers
  • President (UG): Matthew Copeman (Fitzwilliam)
  • President (PG): Augustin Denis (Wolfson)
  • Vice-President (Student Community & Societies): Olivia Ledger (St John's)
  • Vice-President (Education & Widening Participation): Jessica Asiedu-Kwatchey (Christ's)
  • Vice-President (Liberation & Welfare): Melanie Benedict (Magdalene)
AffiliationsNational Union of Students, UKCISA
Websitecambridgesu.co.ukEdit this at Wikidata

Cambridge Students' Union, known asCambridge SU, is the university-wide representative body for students at theUniversity of Cambridge,England. Its predecessor union was known asCambridge University Students' Union orCUSU until its dissolution in July 2020.[1]

Cambridge SU should not be confused with theCambridge Union Society (often referred to as simply 'the Union'); membership of both is open to all students at Cambridge, but the Cambridge Union Society is a private society, whereas all students at the University of Cambridge are automatically members of Cambridge SU (although they can opt-out), and Cambridge SU is partially funded by grants from the university.

Until 2020, graduate students at the University of Cambridge were eligible for membership of CUSU as well as theUniversity of Cambridge Graduate Union, specifically for graduate student affairs. In November 2019, students voted by referendum to dissolve both CUSU and the Graduate Union to form one student union, Cambridge SU.[2] The new single Students' Union was established on 13 July 2020.[1]

History

[edit]

CUSU was founded as the Cambridge Students' Union (CSU) in 1971 to represent all higher education students studying in Cambridge, that is students attending the University of Cambridge plus undergraduates at CCAT (the then Cambridgeshire College of Arts and Technology, which in 1993 became Anglia Polytechnic University, Cambridge, renamed toAnglia Ruskin University in 2005). CSU also represented students at Homerton College, then a separate teacher training college in the city.

CSU during its early years from 1971 to 1974 received support from CCAT Students' Union as CCATSU was from the 1960s the only large NUS-affiliated, and conventionally funded, students' union in Cambridge. CSU in turn supported CCATSU in its campaigns to get more student housing provided for CCAT degree students, a serious issue for the college by the early 1970s. CCATSU and CSU went their separate ways after 1974.

CSU was formally recognised by the University of Cambridge authorities on 25 May 1984 and renamed, following a student referendum in March 1985, as CUSU – Cambridge University Students Union. CSU's second president, in 1972, wasCharles Clarke, later aLabourMP,Secretary of State for Education andHome Secretary.

There had been previous university-wide groups, such as CAMNUS (CambridgeNUS), which was founded in 1964 byGordon Heald,John Bibby and others. CAMNUS arranged certain university-wide student facilities, such as 'CAMNUS Coaches' (an end-of-term bus service to all parts of the country), and an inter-collegiate mail service.

Following a referendum of members of CUSU and theUniversity of Cambridge Graduate Union in 2019, the two agreed to merge. The new union, Cambridge SU, was established in July 2020.[1]

Between 2020 and 2024, Cambridge SU had sevenSU Campaigns, which were free to differ from the central SU on policy matters, with six of which representing a particular subset of students. They were:

  • LGBT+ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender)
  • International Students' Campaign: international students
  • Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) Campaign:Black and minority ethnic students
  • Women's Campaign, known as "WomCam"
  • Disabled Students' Campaign
  • Class Act, representing students from working-class and disadvantaged educational backgrounds
  • Ethical Affairs Campaign, which leads Cambridge SU's work on ethical and environmental issues in the university and wider society

The Campaigns were dissolved in the 2024 Governance Review.[3]

Officers

[edit]

Cambridge SU holds elections annually for 8 full-time officers, several part-time officers and a number of delegates to theNational Union of Students (NUS) Annual Conference.

The full-time officers take a one-year sabbatical from their studies (or directly after they have graduated) and are:

  • President (PG)
  • President (UG)
  • Access, Education and Participation Officer (PG)
  • Access, Education and Participation Officer (UG)
  • Disabled Students' Officer
  • Welfare & Community Officer
  • Women's Officer
  • BME Officer

Cambridge SU is unusual in having 8 full time sabbatical roles, with this number placing it at thehighest end of all UK students' unions in terms of number of full-time, elected officers. This number is due to be reduced to five for 2025-26 onwards as part of the 2024 Governance Review.[3]

Controversy

[edit]

In March 2006, the largest Cambridge college students' union,Trinity College Students' Union voted to disaffiliate from CUSU for the academic year 2006/2007. Several other colleges were reported to be also considering the option.[4] Trinity College Students' Union reaffiliated in early 2007, following re-engagement work by the incumbent sabbatical officers. On 14 November 2010, both the JCR and MCR ofCorpus Christi College disaffiliated, following a college-wide ballot in which 71% of undergraduates and 86% of postgraduates voted in favour of disaffiliation.[5] Also, in November 2013Gonville and Caius College disaffiliated following a referendum which saw a result of 213 votes for disaffiliation and 91 votes against.[6]

In 2015 the university had to give CUSU a £100,000 bailout, but incumbent president Priscilla Mensah denied that this was due to financial mismanagement.[7][8]

In 2019, CUSU presented a surplus budget, ending what the Union described as “a few difficult years in recent history” with regards to its financial situation.[9]

Former officers

[edit]

Notable former officers and sabbaticals include:

Sabbatical Officers

[edit]

Between 2020-21 and 2024-25, the 8 Sabbatical Officer roles elected at Cambridge SU were: President (UG), President (PG), Access, Education and Participation Officer (UG), Access, Education and Participation Officer (PG), BME Officer, Disabled Students' Officer, Welfare and Community Officer, and Women's Officer.

Cambridge SU Sabbatical Officers
YearPresident (UG)President (PG)Access, Education and Participation Officer (UG)Education and Participation Officer (PG)BME OfficerDisabled Students' OfficerWelfare and Community OfficerWomen's Officer
2020-21[10]Ben MargolisAastha DahalEsme CavendishSiyang WeiHoward ChaeKerensa GauntAlice GilderdaleChloe Newbold
2021-22[11]Zak ColemanAnjum NaharZaynab AhmedAmelia JabryTara ChoudhuryAnna WardBen DalitzMilo Eyre-Morgan
2022-23[12]Zaynab AhmedAmelia JabryNeve AtkinsonSavannah PhillipsKefeshe BernardElia ChitwaDaisy ThomasEseosa Akojie
2023-24[13]Fergus KirmanVareesh PratapCaredig ap TomosAni PerysinakisMaroof RafiqueEll Gardner-ThomasHarvey BrownRosie Freeman
2024-25[14]Sarah AndersonSumouli BhattacharjeeKatie ClarkeNeela MaadhureeMaroof RafiqueChalo WayaElleni EsheteNowsha Farha

In 2025, for the first time, 5 Sabbatical Officers were elected to serve (in 2025-26) in the new roles created in the 2024 Governance Review. These roles were: President (UG), President (PG), Vice-President (Education & Widening Participation), Vice-President (Liberation & Welfare), Vice-President (Student Community & Societies).

Cambridge SU Sabbatical Officers
YearPresident (UG)President (PG)Vice-President (Education & Widening Participation)Vice-President (Liberation & Welfare)Vice-President (Student Community & Societies)
2025-26[15]Matthew CopemanAugustin DenisJessica Asiedu-KwatcheyMelanie BenedictOlivia Ledger

References

[edit]
  1. ^abc"Welcome, we are your new Students' Union!".Cambridge SU. Retrieved13 July 2020.
  2. ^"Cambridge Students voted yes to a new single students' union – CUSU".CUSU. Archived from the original on 17 May 2021. Retrieved22 November 2019.
  3. ^ab"What's Changing at Your SU".Cambridge SU. Retrieved13 January 2025.
  4. ^"Trinity reaffiliation greeted with "absolute apathy"; Varsity Online". Varsity.co.uk. Archived fromthe original on 23 May 2023. Retrieved23 May 2023.
  5. ^"corpusJCR – News article".cam.ac.uk. Archived fromthe original on 19 January 2014. Retrieved15 April 2018.
  6. ^"Caius votes to disaffiliate".
  7. ^"CUSU in cash crisis".varsity.co.uk. Retrieved15 April 2018.
  8. ^"Another £100,000 please! CUSU is CU-Screwed after finance goes astray".thetab.com. 2 October 2015. Retrieved15 April 2018.
  9. ^"CUSU 2019–20 budget predicts surplus for first time in recent years".varsity.co.uk. Retrieved1 April 2019.
  10. ^"Few surprises in SU Sabbatical Officer elections, with only one role contested". Retrieved13 January 2025.
  11. ^"Lent Elections: Meet Your Winners!". Retrieved13 January 2025.
  12. ^"Zaynab Ahmed elected SU President". Retrieved13 January 2025.
  13. ^"New SU president: 'We're in a pit and we've got to get out of it'". Retrieved13 January 2025.
  14. ^"Sarah Anderson wins SU presidency". Retrieved13 January 2025.
  15. ^"Leadership Elections: Results Announced". Retrieved18 March 2025.

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