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Day: 1 September 2015

Graduate unemployment returns to pre-recession levels

A survey of young people three-and-a-half years after graduating suggests graduate unemployment has returned to pre-crash levels, though a high proportion of these are in part-time work or further study.

The study, conducted by the Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA), shows that 2.6 per cent of 2011 graduates living in the UK were unemployed three-and-a-half years later, the same level as that of the class of 2005.

However, the data on those in full-time employment does not suggest we have returned to a pre-recession economy. The level of graduates employed full-time rose to 1.4 per cent to 73.4 per cent in the 2011 group, but this is still short of the 76.1 per cent high among 2005 graduates.

The level of graduates in work other than full-time—including voluntary, freelance, and further study alongside work—has remained high at 15.7 per cent, where the 2005 levels were only at 13.6 per cent.

The data suggest that while unemployment is falling, it is still not easy for students to find reliable full-time employment.

The gender pay gap remains present in the data, and while median salary for female first-time degree graduates in full-time employment is £24000, for men this stands at £26000.

While men were more likely to have secured full-time work three-and-a-half years after graduation at 77 per cent compared to 70.5 per cent, female graduates were actually less likely to be unemployed—2.3 per cent to 3.3 per cent.

Jo Johnson, Universities Minister, said the government aims to “ensure everyone has the opportunity to work hard and secure a better future.”

“These latest statistics are a further welcome sign that so many graduates enjoy high levels of employment, but there is more to do to ensure students get the teaching they deserve and employers get the skills they need.”

NUS call for “all-out defiance” of Counter-Terror strategy

The NUS has announced it will be organising a national campaign titled ‘Students not Suspects’ to oppose the government’s Prevent strategy to monitor students in educational institutions.

The tour will visit London, Birmigham, Swansea, Manchester, and Glasgow, in collaboration with civil rights organisation Defend the Right to Protest.

The events will cover the importance of knowing your rights, organising non-compliance campaigns, and talks from individuals who have lost loved ones at the hands of police.

Within the last month, the NUS has called for UK Students’ Unions to oppose Prevent, and the University and College Union (UCU) has advised its members on boycotting the Act.

Section 26 of the Counter-Terrorism and Security Act 2015, better known as Prevent, states that particular bodies, including educational institutions, must “have due regard to the need to prevent people from being drawn into terrorism.”

NUS Vice-President (Welfare) Shelly Asquith named examples of when the Prevent strategy has had a negative impact on freedom of expression on campuses: A campaigner for the living wage was monitored by police; three female students who raised concerns about the Act to their student bodies were suspended; a boy who took leaflets promoting a boycott of Israel was told he had “terrorist-like views”; and a conference on Islamophobia was cancelled.

“With the focus on preventing what the government terms ‘Islamic extremism’, the prospect of racial profiling and state-sponsored Islamophobia is all the worse: Black and Muslim students are bearing the brunt of a reactionary, racist agenda while freedom of speech across the board is curtailed,” she says.

For this reason, the NUS will not comply with Prevent, and support Unions and staff who practice non-compliance. It calls for Unions to work with UCU, organise a campaign, collaborate with national organisations, and pass Union legislation against Prevent.

NUS Black Students Officer Malia Bouattia said: “In bringing their battle ‘for hearts and minds’—and against dissent—to spaces of education with the new Act, the government is inviting to our campuses the same brutality that plagues Black and Muslim people at the hands of the police and state in wider society.

“After decades of racist laws and abuse, it is time students alongside their communities finally fought back.”

Asquith added: “Whether it’s campaigning for education or environmentalism, when students choose to take action we are often met with the long arm of the law. Spied on, beaten, arrested. We need all out defiance towards the lack of justice that is limiting free speech and impacting students’ lives.”

The tour will visit KCL on the 14th of October, the University of Birmingham on the 15th, Swansea University on the 16th, Manchester Metropolitan University on the 21st, and Strathclyde University, Glasgow, on the 23rd.

The University of Manchester Students’ Union has been approached for comment.