Former name | University of Kent at Canterbury |
|---|---|
| Motto | Latin:Cui servire regnare est |
Motto in English | Literal translation: 'Whom to serve is to reign' (Book of Common Prayer translation: 'whose service is perfect freedom')[1] |
| Type | Public |
| Established | 4 January 1965; 60 years ago (1965-01-04) |
| Endowment | £3.8 million (2022)[2] |
| Budget | £260.4 million (2021–22)[2] |
| Chancellor | YolanDa Brown[3] |
| Vice-Chancellor | Professor Georgina Randsley de Moura (acting)[4] |
| Visitor | The Archbishop of Canterburyex officio |
| Students | 17,190 (2023/24)[5] |
| Undergraduates | 13,860 (2023/24)[5] |
| Postgraduates | 3,330 (2023/24)[5] |
| Location | |
| Campus | Semi-rural |
| Colours | Kent Blue and Kent Red |
| Affiliations | Universities UK SGroup European Universities' Network EUA ACU Eastern ARC Universities at Medway |
| Website | kent |
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TheUniversity of Kent (formerly theUniversity of Kent at Canterbury, abbreviated asUKC) is apublicresearch university based inKent,United Kingdom. The university was granted itsroyal charter on 4 January 1965 and the following yearPrincess Marina, Duchess of Kent, was formally installed as the firstChancellor.[6]
The university has its main campus north ofCanterbury situated within 300 acres (120 hectares) of parkland, housing over 6,000 students, as well as a campus inMedway in Kent and a postgraduate centre in Paris.[7] The university is international, with students from 158 different nationalities and 41% of its academic and research staff being from outside the United Kingdom.[8] It is a member of the Santander Network of European universities encouraging social and economic development.[9]
A university in the city ofCanterbury was first considered in 1947, when an anticipated growth in student numbers led several residents to seek the creation of a new university, including Kent. However, the plans never came to fruition.[10] A decade later both population growth and greater demand for university places led to a re-consideration. In 1959 the Education Committee ofKent County Council explored the creation of a new university,[11] formally accepting the proposal unanimously on 24 February 1960.[12] Two months later the Education Committee agreed to seek a site at or near Canterbury, given the historical associations of the city, subject to the support of Canterbury City Council.[13]
By 1962 a site was found at Beverley Farm, straddling the then boundary between the City of Canterbury and theadministrative county of Kent.[14] The university's original name, chosen in 1962, was theUniversity of Kent at Canterbury, reflecting its cross boundary campus.[11] The name adopted reflected the support of both the city and county authorities; as well as the existence of theUniversity of Canterbury in New Zealand, which officially opposed the use of a name too similar to its own.[15] The abbreviation "UKC"became a popular abbreviation for the university.[16]
The University of Kent at Canterbury was granted itsRoyal Charter on 4 January 1965 and the first group of 500 students arrived on 11 October 1965.[17]
On 30 March 1966Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent was formally installed as the firstChancellor.[6]
The university was envisaged as being acollegiate establishment, with most students living in one of the colleges on campus, and as specialising ininter-disciplinary studies in all fields.[18] Over the years, changes in government policy and other changing demands have largely destroyed this original concept, leading to the present state, which is nearer the norm for a British university. However, the four original colleges – Darwin, Eliot, Keynes and Rutherford – remain, together with the newer Woolf and Turing colleges.[19]
The university grew at a rapid rate throughout the 1960s, with three colleges and many other buildings on campus being completed by the end of the decade.[20] The 1970s saw further construction, but the university also encountered the biggest physical problem in its history.[21] The university had been built above a tunnel on the disusedCanterbury and Whitstable Railway. In July 1974 the tunnel collapsed, damaging part of the Cornwallis Building, which sank nearly a metre within about an hour on the evening of 11 July.[22] Fortunately, the university had insurance against subsidence, so it was able to pay for the south-west corner of the building to be demolished and replaced by a new wing at the other end of the building.[23]
Unix computers arrived in 1976 and UKC set up the firstUnix to Unix copy (UUCP) test service to Bell Labs in the U.S. in 1979. UKC provided the first UUCO connections to non-academic users in the UK in the early 1980s.[24][25][26]
In 1982 the university opened the University Centre at Tonbridge (now the University of Kent at Tonbridge) for its School ofContinuing education, helping to enhance the availability of teaching across the county.[27] Building elsewhere included the Park Wood accommodation village and the Darwin houses in 1989.
During the 1990s and 2000s the university expanded beyond its original campus, establishing campuses inMedway,Tonbridge andBrussels, and partnerships withCanterbury College,West Kent College,South Kent College andMidKent College.[27]
In the 2000s the university entered a collaboration namedUniversities at Medway with theUniversity of Greenwich,MidKent College andCanterbury Christ Church University to deliver university provision in theMedway area.[28] This led to the development of theUniversity of Kent at Medway, opened from 2001. Initially based at Mid-Kent College, a new joint campus opened in 2004.[28] Small postgraduate centres opened in Paris in 2009, and later in Rome and Athens.
As a consequence of the expansion outside Canterbury the university's name was formally changed to theUniversity of Kent on 1 April 2003.[28] Part of the original reasoning for the name disappeared whenlocal government reforms in the 1970s resulted in the Canterbury campus falling entirely within theCity of Canterbury, which no longer has county borough status, and Kent County Council.
In 2007 the university was rebranded with a new logo and website. The logo was chosen following consultation with existing university students and those insixth forms across the country.[29]
The University of Kent set its tuition fees for UK and European Union undergraduates at £9,000 for new entrants in 2012, which was approved by theOffice for Fair Access (OFFA). The fee was approved by Council on 1 April 2011 and was confirmed by OFFA in July 2011. The proposed changes to UK and EU undergraduate tuition fees did not apply to international student fees.
Following the extension of Keynes College in 2001, two new colleges opened on the Canterbury campus, Woolf College for postgraduates in 2008 and Turing College for undergraduates in 2015. Several other new buildings were also added, including the Jarman School of Arts Building in 2009, the Colyer-Fergusson Music Building, a performing arts space, in 2012, and the Sibson building, housing maths and the business school, in 2017. A major £27m project to extend and refurbish the Templeman Library began in 2013, was completed in 2017 and formally opened in 2018.[30] Additional accommodation was provided for students at the Medway Campus with the completion of Liberty Quays in 2009.[31]
In 2015, the university held a number of events to celebrate its 50th anniversary. Festivals were held in Canterbury and Medway, a summer festival, the funding of twelve Beacon Projects and the temporary erection of a Ferris Wheel on the Canterbury campus.[32] In 2016, a consultation was launched on a masterplan for future development of the Canterbury campus.[33] In March 2017 it was announced that, in partnership withCanterbury Christ Church University, the University of Kent had been given funding to developKent and Medway Medical School.[34] In 2023, more than 450 students in the Kent's Student Union voted in favour of moving all catering to plant-based. The vote follows similar votes at other universities.[35]
The University of Kent saw its first two alumni going on to win Nobel prizes, both for literature:Kazuo Ishiguro (English and Philosophy, 1978) in 2017 andAbdulrazak Gurnah (PhD, 1982) in 2021.
In June 2022, the University of Kent signed a twinning agreement withKherson State University (KSU) inUkraine as part of the UK government-backedUniversities UK (UUK) initiative.[36][37] The partnership aims to support KSU during theRussian invasion of Ukraine, providing academic and technical assistance, including online English classes, guest lectures, and research collaboration.[38] This agreement is part of a broader effort by UK universities to support Ukrainian institutions affected by the war.
In 2024, as part of its "Kent 2030" strategy to address financial challenges, the University of Kent announced plans to discontinue six courses: anthropology, art history, health and social care, journalism, music and audio technology, and philosophy. This decision raised concerns among students and staff regarding the potential impact on academic diversity and future career opportunities.[39] In response to the proposed course closures and the planned elimination of 58 jobs, staff at the university voted in favor of strike action. Additionally, a petition to preserve the affected courses garnered over 16,000 signatures.[40]
A revision of the university's ordinances in June 2025 deleted the section on colleges that had been present up to the 2024 revision, removing them from the university's constitutional documents.[41][42]
On the 10th September 2025, the university announced plans to merge with theUniversity of Greenwich, with degrees continuing to be awarded under either the Kent or Greenwich name rather than adopting a single unified university designation.[43][44] The two universities will form theLondon and South East University Group.[43]
The mainCanterbury campus covers 300 acres (120 hectares) and is situated in parkland in an elevated position just over two miles (three kilometres) from the city centre, with views over the city andCanterbury Cathedral UNESCO world heritage site. The campus currently has approximately 12,000 full-time and 6,200 part-time students, with accommodation for over 5000, in addition to 600 academic and research staff. Residential and academic buildings are intermingled in the central part of the campus, science building are clustered west of Giles Lens and there is a dedicated student village on the western edge, several minutes’ walk from the main campus. The campus is ecologically diverse and home to a number of protected species, including Great Crested Newts. The North West of the site is heavily forested, including pockets of ancient woodland, while the Southern Slopes contain a mix of wildflower and hay meadows, and there are seven ponds spread across the campus.
The campus has a selection of shops, including a grocery store, bookshop, pharmacy and launderettes. Food and drink is provided by range of cafes and bars run either by the university or the student union. Bars include K-bar, in Keynes College, Mungo's, in Eliot College, Origins, in Darwin College, and Woody's in the Park Wood Student Village. Cafeteria style food is available in Rutherford College, fine dining at the Beagle Restaurant in Darwin College, and food is served at the bars and other cafes around campus.
The campus nightclub, The Venue, was refurbished and modernised in 2010 and is open Wednesday to Saturday. The upstairs area was originally used a live music venue, known as The Lighthouse and then the Attic, but has since been replaced with the Student Media Centre which hosts Inquire, KTV and CSR. Club nights and live music are also held at various bars on campus.
Sporting facilities are spread across two main sites: the sports centre, which contains several multi-purpose sports halls, a fitness suite, squash courts and climbing wall, and the Sports Pavilion site, with a variety of indoor and outdoor sports pitches and training facilities, including 3G and astroturf.
The Gulbenkian arts complex includes a theatre and cinema, as well as a small stage which hosts monthly comedy nights as well as occasional shows such as Jazz at Five and The Chortle Student Comedy Awards. The adjacent Colyer-Fergusson Building, which opened in 2013, includes an adaptable format concert/rehearsal hall with retractable seating and variable acoustics and practice rooms. TheGulbenkian Theatre seats 340 and presents student, professional and amateur shows throughout the year. The theatre was opened in 1969 and was named after theCalouste Gulbenkian Foundation which helped fund its construction. The Gulbenkian Cinema is an independent cinema in the Gulbenkian complex open to students and the general public. It is Kent's regional film theatre showing new mainstream and non-mainstream releases as well as archive and foreign language films. In the daytime the cinema is used as a lecture theatre for University students.[45] The Gulbenkian complex also hosts a cafe/ bar and restaurant facility open to students, staff and the general public.
The campus is accessed by road from either the West, with two entrances on the A290 Whitstable Road, or the East, via St Stephen's Hill. An off-road foot and cycle route connects the central campus to the Northern edge of the city, and a regular bus services (‘UniBus’) is also in operation, although with a more limited service outside of term time. TheA2 dual carriageway links the campus and city to London, the port atDover and the national motorway network. The campus also lies at the southern end of theCrab and Winkle Way, a 7-mile off-road foot and cycle path running through farm and woodland to the coastal fishing town ofWhitstable, providing a link for cycle commuters.
The closest railway station to the campus isCanterbury West which is, as of 2009, served bySoutheastern services toLondon St Pancras. These services stop atAshford International en route, thus providing a direct connection toEurostar services to France and Belgium. Southeastern services also connect Canterbury West andCanterbury East stations with LondonVictoria andCharing Cross. Both of the Canterbury stations can be accessed by the UniBus service. The nearest international air services are provided from the London airports,Gatwick andHeathrow, with indirectNational Express coach services to both fromCanterbury Bus Station with one transfer at LondonVictoria Coach Station. The campus is also served by two coach services (Route 007) to/from London each day, with further services operating from Canterbury bus station.
In 2000 the university joined with other educational institutes to form the "Universities for Medway" initiative, aimed at increasing participation in higher education in theMedway Towns.[28] The following year theUniversity of Kent at Medway formally opened, initially based atMid-Kent College.[28] By 2004 a new campus for the university had been established in the oldChatham Dockyard,[28] sharing a campus withCanterbury Christchurch University andUniversity of Greenwich.
The University of Kent andMedway Park Sports Centre have gone into a partnership to provide leisure facilities for university students and the general public. Medway Park (formerly the Black Lion Leisure Centre) was re-opened in 2011 byPrincess Anne for use as a training venue for the 2012 London Olympics, as well as a training venue for the Egyptian and Congo National teams.
The campus accommodation, called Pier Quays, formerly named Liberty Quays until 2019 when Unite Group acquired Liberty Living,[46][47] was finished in late 2009, and caters for over 600 students. The accommodation building includes aTesco Express,Subway, andDomino's Pizza, and Cargo, a bar showing sports, live music, and entertainment.
In 1982 the university established the School ofcontinuing education in the centre ofTonbridge, extending its coverage to the entire county of Kent.[48] Many buildings were added in the 1980s and 1990s.[27] The campus is now called theUniversity of Kent at Tonbridge. It collaborates with theKent Business School and Kent Innovation and Enterprise.

Until 2020, the university was divided into three faculties, humanities, sciences and social sciences, which are further sub-divided into 20 schools:
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The original plan was to have no academic sub-divisions within the three faculties (initially Humanities, Social Sciences and Natural Sciences) and to incorporate an interdisciplinary element to all degrees through common first year courses ("Part I") in each faculty, followed by specialist study in the second and final years ("Part II").[18] The lack of Departments encouraged the development of courses that crossed traditional divides, such as Chemical Physics, Chemistry with Control Engineering, Biological Chemistry and Environmental Physical Science.[49]
However, the interdisciplinary approach proved increasingly complex for two reasons. The levels of specialisation atA Levels meant that many students had not studied particular subjects for some years and this made it impossible to devise a course that both covered areas unstudied by some and did not bore others. This proved an especial problem in Natural Sciences, where many Mathematics students had not studied Chemistry at A Level and vice versa.

Additionally many subjects, particularly those in the Social Sciences, were not taught at A Level and required the first year as a grounding in the subject rather than an introduction to several different new subjects. Problems were especially encountered in the Faculty of Natural Sciences where the differing demands of Mathematics and physical sciences led to two almost completely separate programmes and student bases.[49] In 1970 this led to the creation of the School of Mathematical Studies, standing outside the Faculties.[50] The addition of other subjects led to increased pressure on common Part I programmes and increasingly students took more specialised Part I courses designed to prepare them for Part II study.[49]
Substantial change to this structure did not come until the 1990s, driven more by national government policy than curricular demands, which were, after all, very flexible by nature. In 1989 the Universities Funding Council, which was merged into theHigher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) in 1992, was charged by the UK Government to determine the cost for teaching each subject. To meet these accountancy requirements, Kent required for the first time that each member of staff declare a single discipline they would be affiliated with in future. When departments were formed in the early 1990s this led to a great deal of reorganisation of staff, and destroyed many existing inter-disciplinary relationships. Following the formation of departments, finance was devolved to departments based on how many students were taught. This quickly evolved into undermining the interdisciplinary context further, as departments sought to control finance by increasing the amount of specialist teaching in the first year.
The university now has the Faculties further divided into 18 Departments and Schools, ranging from the School of English to the Department of Biosciences, and from the Kent Law School to the Department of Economics. Also of note is the university'sBrussels School of International Studies, located inBrussels, Belgium. The school offers master's degrees ininternational relations theory and international conflict analysis, along with an LLM ininternational law. In 2005 a new department, the Kent School of Architecture, began teaching its first students. In 2008,Wye College came under Kent's remit, in joint partnership withImperial College London.
In 2020, because of financial pressures caused by a combination of the 2000 demographic dip and the 2020/21COVID-19 pandemic, the university abolished the faculties and reorganised itself into 6 divisions (see below).
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The university was formerly divided into eight colleges, six colleges named after distinguished scholars, one college after a town and one named after a student village. As of 2025, colleges have been removed from the university's constitutional documents.[41] Colleges had academic schools, lecture theatres, seminar rooms and halls of residence. Each college had a master, who was responsible for student welfare within their college. In chronological order of construction they were:
| Name | Foundation | Named after |
|---|---|---|
| Eliot College | 1965 | T. S. Eliot |
| Rutherford College | 1966 | Ernest Rutherford |
| Keynes College | 1968 | John Maynard Keynes |
| Darwin College | 1970 | Charles Darwin |
| Park Wood College | 1989 (Became a college in 2022) | Park Wood |
| Medway College | 2000 | Medway |
| Woolf College | 2008 | Virginia Woolf |
| Turing College | 2014 | Alan Turing |
The university also has an associate college namedChaucer College.
There was much discussion about the names adopted for most of the colleges with the following alternative names all in consideration at one point or another: for Eliot: Caxton, afterWilliam Caxton; for Keynes:Richborough, a town in Kent;Anselm, a formerarchbishop of Canterbury; and for Darwin: Anselm (again); Attlee, afterClement Attlee, the post-war Prime Minister; Becket, afterThomas Becket, another former archbishop (this was the recommendation of the college's provisional committee but rejected by the Senate); Conrad; Elgar, afterEdward Elgar; Maitland; Marlowe, afterChristopher Marlowe; Russell, afterBertrand Russell (this was the recommendation of the Senate but rejected by the council); Tyler, after bothWat Tyler and Tyler Hill on which the campus stands. The name for the college proved especially contentious and was eventually decided by a postal ballot of members of the Senate, choosing from: Attlee, Conrad, Darwin, Elgar, Maitland, Marlowe and Tyler.[51](Both Becket and Tyler were eventually used as the names for residential buildings on campuses and the building housing both the Architecture and Anthropology departments is named Marlowe.)
Each college had residential rooms, lecture theatres, study rooms, computer rooms and social areas. The intention of thecolleges was that they should not be justHalls of residence, but completeacademic communities. Each college (except Woolf) had its own bar, all rebuilt on a larger scale, and originally its own dining hall (only Rutherford still had a functioning dining hall;[when?] Darwin's is hired out for conferences and events; Keynes's was closed in 2000 and converted into academic space, but in 2011 Dolche Vita was expanded and became the dining hall for Keynes students in catered accommodation after Keynes's expansion in 2011; and Eliot's was closed in 2006). It was expected that each college (more were planned) would have around 600 students as members, with an equivalent proportion of staff, with half the students living within the college itself and the rest coming onto campus to eat and study within their colleges. Many facilities, ranging from accommodation, tutorials and alumni relations, would be handled on a college basis. With no planned academic divisions below the Faculty level, the colleges would be main focus of students' lives and there would be no units of a similar or smaller size to provide a rival focus of loyalties.
This vision of a collegiate university increasingly fell away. The funding for colleges did not keep pace with the growth in student numbers, with the result that only four colleges were built. In later years when there was heavy student demand for scarce accommodation in Canterbury the solution was found in building additional on-campus accommodation but not in the form of further colleges. The hopes that students living off campus would stay around to eat dinner in their colleges were not met, whilst the abolition of college amenities fees removed students' direct stake in their colleges. With the growth of specialist subject departments as well as of other university wide facilities, more and more of the role of colleges was transferred to the central university. Accommodation and catering were transferred to the centralisedUniversity of Kent at Canterbury Hospitality (UKCH).[52]
Eventually, the university ceased to operate as a traditional collegiate university – applications were made to the university as a whole, and many of the colleges relied on each other for day-to-day operation. Academic departments had no formal ties to colleges other than those that are located within particular college buildings due to availability of space, with lectures, seminars and tutorials taking place wherever there was an available room rather than on a college basis. Many students were allocated accommodation in their respective college, but some were housed in developments with no defined collegiate link whilst others were housed in different colleges.College masters were abolished in 2020.[53]
As of 2025, the university is no longer constitutionally collegiate,[41] and only three of the offered residences still bear the names of colleges – Darwin, Keynes and Woolf.[54]

In the financial year ended 31 July 2013, the University of Kent had a total income (including share of joint ventures) of £201.3 million, grew by 5.8% with an additional £21.4 million of fee income (2011/12 – £190.2 million) and total expenditure of £188.7 million (2011/12 – £175.9 million).[55] Key sources of income included £98.5 million from tuition fees and education contracts (2011/12 – £77.2 million), £48.9 million from Funding Council grants (2011/12 – £62.5 million), £13.4 million from research grants and contracts (2011/12 – £11.4 million) and £1.2 million from endowment and investment income (2011/12 – £1.09 million).[55] During the 2012/13 financial year the University of Kent had a capital expenditure of £28.2 million (2011/12 – £16.1 million).[55]
At year end the University of Kent had endowment assets of £6.3 million (2011/12 – £6.04 million) and total net assets of £175.9 million (2011/12 – £165.1 million).[55]
The annual income of the institution for 2021–22 was £260.4 million of which £17.7 million was from research grants and contracts, with an expenditure of £326.7 million.
The University of Kent'scoat of arms was granted by theCollege of Arms in September 1967.[11] Thewhite horse of Kent is taken from the arms of theCounty of Kent (and can also be seen on theFlag of Kent). The three Cornishchoughs, originally belonging to the arms ofThomas Becket, were taken from the arms of theCity of Canterbury. The Crest depicts the West Gate of Canterbury with a symbolic flow of water, presumably theGreat Stour, below it. Two golden Bishops'Crosiers in the shape of aSt. Andrews Cross are shown in front of it. The supporters – lions with the sterns of golden ships – are taken from the arms of theCinque Ports.[56]
The coat of arms is now formally used only for degree certificates, degree programmes and some merchandise, as a result of the university seeking a consistent identity branding.[29]
Kent is a research-led university with 24 schools and 40 specialist research centres spanning the sciences, technology, medical studies, the social sciences, arts and humanities.[57] In the 2021Research Excellence Framework (REF), which assesses the quality of research in UK higher education institutions, Kent is ranked 38th by GPA and 32nd for research power (the grade point average score of a university, multiplied by the full-time equivalent number of researchers submitted).[58] In the 2014 REF, the University of Kent was ranked 40th out of 128 participating institutions in a 'grade point average' league table inThe Times Higher Education Supplement (falling from 31st in 2008),[59] 30th in terms of 'Research Power' (rising from 40th in 2008),[59] and 19th in terms of 'Research Intensity' (rising from 49th in 2008).[60] The university had a total research income of £17.7 million in the 2021-22 academic year.[2]
| National rankings | |
|---|---|
| Complete (2026)[61] | 49 |
| Guardian (2026)[62] | 80 |
| Times / Sunday Times (2026)[63] | 56 |
| Global rankings | |
| ARWU (2025)[64] | 401–500 |
| QS (2026)[65] | 397= |
| THE (2026)[66] | 401–500 |
For 2020,The Guardian newspaper ranked Kent 65th in the UK, whileThe Sunday Times Good University Guide 2018 put Kent in 25th place, as didThe Independent's Complete University Guide.QS placed Kent 46th in the UK and 366th in the world, whileTimes Higher Education placed it 44th in the UK and in the 301–350 group worldwide. InThe Sunday Times 10-year (1998–2007) average ranking of British universities based on consistent league table performance, Kent was ranked 48th overall in the UK.[67] In 2015, Kent ranked ahead of 10Russell Group universities according to the ranking ofThe Complete University Guide. In research, bothThe Guardian andThe Times newspapers ranked Kent 29th, with The Independent rating the university 28th for its overall research activity in 2014.[68]
TheNational Student Survey in 2017 placed Kent joint 20th in the UK, with an overall satisfaction of 90%.[69]
In the Times Higher Education's assessment of the 2021Research Excellence Framework, the History department at Kent was ranked first in the country.[70]
The Templeman Library (named afterGeoffrey Templeman, the university's first Vice-Chancellor) contains over a million items in stock including books, journals, videos, DVDs, and archive materials (for example, a full text ofThe Times from 1785 onwards), yet it is still only half its planned size. It has a materials fund of approximately £1million a year, and adds 12,000 items every year. It is open every day in term time, on a 24/7 basis. It receives 800,000 visits a year, with approximately half a million loansper annum.
The library also houses the British Cartoon Archive,[71] (established 1975[50]) a national collection of political and social cartoons, with over 90,000 images catalogued and an extensive collection of related books.
In 2013 work began to extend, refurbish and completely modernise the Templeman Library, including the addition of study space, along with the creation of a new purpose-built lecture theatre. Additionally, the Library facade underwent major renovation. This work was completed in 2017, with additional refurbishment work planned for 2018.
The bilingual Franco-British double-degree programme combines subjects in one degree and is taught in two countries. The first year is spent at the Institut d'études politiques de Lille (IEP), the second and third years at the University of Kent, the fourth year at the IEP of Lille and the fifth is spent in Canterbury, Brussels or Lille.
The students of the Franco-British double-degree programme receive, at the end of the fourth year, the Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree from the University of Kent, the Diplôme by the IEP of Lille and, at the end of the fifth year, either theMaster of Arts (MA) degree in Canterbury or in Brussels or the Master delivered by the IEP of Lille, chosen between14 parcours de formation by the IEP of Lille.[72][73]
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The student population is mixed, with around 15,000 undergraduates and 4,000 postgraduates, with approximately 22% of students coming from overseas.[77] Approximately 128 different nationalities are currently represented, and the female to male ratio is 55 women to every 45 men.[77]
New students entering the university in 2021 had an average of 127 points (the equivalent of BBB-ABB at A Level).[76] According to the 2023Times andSunday Times Good University Guide, approximately 4% of Kent's undergraduates come from independent schools.[78]
The Students' Union, officially known as "Kent Union", is thestudent representative body for students at the university. It is led by five elected full-time officers (the 'sabbatical team'), a Board of trustees, part-time student officers and 'lay' members of the local community and business selected for their specialist expertise.
The university has twoCo-Op shops, one in the main campus area, and the other in Park Wood student village. The two all-purpose food and essentials stores were previously knownEssentials andParkwood Essentials. The Union also operates the Park Wood barWoody's and a 1,500 capacity nightclubThe Venue which, unusually, is located on the central campus. Essentials, the Venue and other shops and Union offices are located in purpose-made buildings completed in 1998.[79] Kent Union also co-ordinates over 200 sports clubs and societies, as well as media outlets, volunteering and charity activities, and provides student welfare services.
The Students' Union has hosted concerts by bands includingLed Zeppelin[80] andThe Who.[81]

In early March 1970 a General Meeting of the University of Kent at Canterbury Students' Union voted to occupy the Cornwallis Building as part of a national student movement to open personal records to individual student scrutiny.[82] The occupation lasted about two weeks, with a majority vote ending the occupation on 18 March. Approximately 400 students marched out of the Cornwallis Building to present a set of demands that were handed by Union President David Lawrence to the University Registrar Mr Eric Fox. The demands had been drawn up and debated by groups of up to 300 students at a time in meetings and seminars held throughout the occupation.[83]
In the early to mid-1970s, along with other plate-glass universities, the Union had a reputation for revolutionary politics, leading to demands for law changes from some staff trade unionists.[84] It was active in anti-poll tax, anti-student loans and anti-racism campaigns as well as safety campaigns on campus in the late 1980s.
In 2003, ahead of the 'Top Up Fees' vote, the Union took 300 students to take part in the NUS UK Student Demonstrations on three double decker buses. The Union covered all the transport costs to the demonstration. In 2010, ahead of a parliamentary vote on issues concerning raising tuition fees, the Union took part in thenational demonstrations. The union heavily subsidised the transport for 500 students to get to London.
Whilst the university issecular, there is a chaplaincy consisting of permanentAnglican andCatholic priests and aPentecostalminister, as well as part-time chaplains from other denominations and faiths. The chaplaincy runs the annual Carol Service that takes place every year inCanterbury Cathedral at the end of Autumn Term.

The university has the following undergraduate student housing on the Canterbury campus:[85]
Postgraduate rooms are available at Darwin College, Darwin Houses, Keynes College and Woolf College.[86]
Accessible rooms are available in Giles Court, Keynes Flats, Park Wood Flats (Kemsdale Court), Turing Flats, Tyler Court and Woolf College.[87]
University of Kent and Canterbury Christ Church University, as well as their associated Students' Unions, fund Canterbury's only student and community radio station: CSR 97.4FM. The radio station broadcasts from studios at both universities 24 hours a day, with live broadcasting from 7 am – 12 am. CSR 97.4FM replacedUKC Radio, the original student-run radio station at the university.
The university has a student newspaper named InQuire and an online news website InQuire Media[88] (launched in January 2008). The newspaper is published every month and is made in its entirety by a group of student volunteers. Content is edited by volunteers and is focused on campus issues and news that affects students. Funded by Kent Union, the newspaper is subject to moderation before publication.
Kent Television (KTV), founded in 2012, is the volunteer-run television studio at the university.[89]
Alumni of the University of Kent include several academics (particularly at British universities), two recipients of theNobel Prize in Literature, a recipient of theVictoria Cross and relations of the extendedBritish royal family.