NUS-USI
Encyclopedia
NUS-USI, the student
Student
A student is a learner, or someone who attends an educational institution. In some nations, the English term is reserved for those who attend university, while a schoolchild under the age of eighteen is called a pupil in English...

 movement in Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland is one of the four countries of the United Kingdom. Situated in the north-east of the island of Ireland, it shares a border with the Republic of Ireland to the south and west...

 was formed in 1972 by bilateral
Bilateralism
Bilateralism consists of the political, economic, or cultural relations between two sovereign states. For example, free trade agreements signed by two states are examples of bilateral treaties. It is in contrast to unilateralism or multilateralism, which refers to the conduct of diplomacy by a...

 agreement between the National Union of Students of the United Kingdom (NUS) and the Union of Students in Ireland
Union of Students in Ireland
The Union of Students in Ireland is the national representative body for third-level students' unions in Ireland. The Union of Students in Ireland is the sole national representative body for students in Ireland but does not represent students from two of the seven Irish Universities, namely...

 (USI), to address the particular problems of macro-representation of students in the Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland is one of the four countries of the United Kingdom. Situated in the north-east of the island of Ireland, it shares a border with the Republic of Ireland to the south and west...

.

Students at an affiliated college
College
A college is an educational institution or a constituent part of an educational institution. Usage varies in English-speaking nations...

 are members of both national students' union
Students' union
A students' union, student government, student senate, students' association, guild of students or government of student body is a student organization present in many colleges and universities, and has started appearing in some high schools...

s, and benefit from full representation in each body. The elected leader of the organisation is a full-time representative, elected as a sabbatical from one of the member colleges, and serves as a member of the USI Officer Board and the NUS National Executive Committee. An elected term is one year long (July-June). An officer within the executive of the movement may hold an officer position for a maximum of two terms.

The current President of NUS-USI is Adrianne Peltz, a former SERC student, former President of SERC (09/10 - 10/11)

NUS-USI also has a number of part-time student officers filling the following roles:
  • Deputy President
  • Further Education Union Development Officer
  • Education and Welfare Officer
  • Community and Volunteering Officer
  • Environmental Awareness Officer
  • Disability Officer
  • Women's Officer
  • LGBT Officer
  • Equality Officer


The nature of the organization leads to these positions changing regularly between students and some remaining unfilled.

Historical background

The following short background to the historical development of the student movement in Northern Ireland attempts to place in context the relationship between local Students' Unions and the National Union of Students (NUSUK) and the Union of Students in Ireland (USI).

Following the model of Scottish Universities, a Students Representative Council (SRC) was formally established in Queens College Belfast in 1897 following the opening of a Students' Union Building in what is now the music department. Student representatives from Queens subsequently played important roles in founding the National Union of Students UK in 1922 and the Irish Students Association, which stimulated the formation of the Union of Students in Ireland in 1959.

With the development of higher education in Northern Ireland, other Students’ Unions were established as constituent parts of their institutions to complement, by the provision of benefits, services and activities, the more formal aspects of post-school education. This constitutional relationship was formalized in University Charters and Statutes and the instruments and articles of other colleges. Such Students’ Unions were delegated wide measures of autonomy, promoting democratic accountability and self-government detailed in constitutions approved by their parent institutions.

Registering as a student conferred membership of the recognized Students’ Union of the parent institution, thus ensuring that Unions were representative of the total student community facilitating an effective communication channel with the college. This principle of automatic membership became enshrined in the statutory arrangements made in 1962 for the payment of Students’ Union fees by Local Education Authorities in Britain which stated:-

"The Minister has accepted the recommendation of the Standing Advisory Committee on Grants to Students that Student Union Fees should be met as a tuition cost. The Minister hopes that this grant will be handed over to the responsible committee and that the students' union will be, as far as possible, an independent self governing body."

This arrangement was mirrored in Northern Ireland for mandatory awards and extended to further education in circular 1969/61 "Awards for Further Education".

"The Ministry trusts that local education authorities will agree that the establishment of a recognized Students' Union should be encouraged in colleges of further education ..."

As the nature and interests of post-school education and the student body began to change, so too did Students’ Unions. Increasing student political awareness and a desire for more democratic forms of student involvement in the late 1960s led to a moving away from the model of Student Representative Councils (SRCs) as a system of governance towards the creation of Students’ Unions and more participatory "general meetings", accessible to all students. Students’ Unions also took on a more campaigning role and inspired by the experience of American student organizations, Northern Ireland student activists such as Eamonn McCann and Bernadette Devlin (McAliskey) spearheaded campaigns for "civil rights" in Northern Ireland generating what some commentators believe is a negative cultural image of Students' Unions unfortunately still shared by sections of the Unionist Community in Northern Ireland who tend to blame the student movement at the time for starting the troubles/conflict in Northern Ireland.

During this period, unions in Northern Ireland separately affiliated to each national union, depending to a large extent on the religious/political disposition of their members. So, for example, Stranmillis College Students’ Union affiliated to NUSUK whilst St Mary’s was more interested in availing of USI’s services.

However, in what was viewed as a commitment to non-sectarianism, a group of colleges in the early 1970s decided to affiliate to both National Students Unions - a development quickly followed by all other Students’ Unions in the region.

In a far-reaching and visionary initiative, both the British and Irish student movements agreed to pool their representative functions by jointly organizing in Northern Ireland. A protocol agreement, signed on 26 July 1972, committed both national unions to jointly establishing an office in Belfast and the setting of a composite affiliation fee covering membership of both national unions. The agreement also specified that member unions had to affiliate to both national bodies: if a local Students’ Union disaffiliated from one national union, the other would automatically remove them from membership.

The difficult political climate of the 1970s did not augur well for Anglo-Irish co-operation in any sphere, never mind student politics, and it is clear from the records that it was only in 1974 that the full outworking of the protocol agreement began to have an impact.

As Pat Brady, USI Education Officer in 1973 has stated:-

“My recollection is that, in this period, relationships between the two national organizations (NUS and USI) were extremely bad. Indeed, whatever may have been in the 1972 protocol, there was a serious danger of a more or less sectarian line up of the (Northern Ireland) colleges with one or other of the national unions in the autumn of 1973 .... In any event, there was a summit in Galway in February 1974 between the two national unions. It was at that meeting that the effective cement in the relationship was established. In fact, one of the outcomes of the Galway agreement was that we ran a campaign in the summer of 1974 under the slogan “end sectarianism – build the student movement”. This took the form of a poster campaign and also a series of reasonably large meetings at various colleges in the region.”

This updated version of the 1972 protocol agreement also provided for the appointment a full time regional officer to help co-ordinate campaign activities in the Northern Ireland region. Ray Cashell was appointed to this role, followed by other staff such as Gerry Cushnahan in the 1980s and Peter O'Neill in the 1990s. Gail Ferguson is the current Manager of the regional office.

As well as campaigning against sectarianism, NUS-USI in the 1970s also began to agitate for a wider range of social policy concerns such as increases in student maintenance support and better student housing.

Meetings with Government ministers became a regular occurrence in the late 1970s and formal recognition was achieved in the right of Students’ Unions to exist in further education (FE) colleges. An increasing proportion of the NUS-USI Regional Officers time was spent organizing unions in the FE sector as the membership of NUS-USI expanded to include, not only in universities and teacher education colleges but also FE and agricultural institutions.

Student activists during this period provided support to the development of Northern Ireland’s civic society with, for example, support for lesbian and gay liberation campaigns and the growth of the women’s movement. Students were also important in establishing peace and reconciliation groups such as the Corrymeala Community. Yet, stresses and strains were still evident in how the student movement dealt with issues relating to the national/constitutional question with, for example, Stranmillis College Students’ Union disaffiliating in 1980 over a policy passed at an NUS Conference expressing support for a campaign by Republican prisoners to improve conditions in the women’s prison in Armagh.

Nevertheless, NUS-USI continued to flourish with the development of a Student Housing Association in 1977 (founded by Ray Cashell), and the promotion of a wider range of services. It also facilitated the neutralization of sectarian tension on campus allowing Students’ Unions to promote initiatives such as the "Peace Jobs Progress" campaign in 1978 (modeled on Trade Union/Workers Party influences) and the Peace People for example.

Another significant feature during this period was the development of Students’ Union commercial Services, stimulated by the National Student Unions. Local unions benefited greatly from services such as the collective purchasing deals co-ordinated by NUS Services Ltd. (now NUSSL); USIT Travel founded by USI; Endsleigh Insurance Services Ltd. established by NUS; and the previously mentioned Student Housing Association Co-op (SHAC) created by NUS-USI.

These commercial developments were mirrored by local unions providing comprehensive recreational and social facilities catering for the needs of numerous sports clubs and societies, for example. In many cases, Students’ Unions were encouraged, by the failure of their parent institutions to establish bars, shops, creches, welfare advice and counseling services. In the higher education sector, funding had developed from an initial "per head" system (an amount for each student based on the tuition fee) to one where Students’ Unions receive a "block grant" similar to other departments of the institution. University Students’ Unions in Northern Ireland are now large businesses with highly developed commercial operations and multimillion pound turnovers. Greater student numbers and the increasingly complex demands of a diverse student body have manifested itself in the development of an entrepreneurial culture on campus and the employment by HE Students’ Unions of a large professional support staff but as some commentators believe at the expense of a more active student political engagement.

In 1987, the first full time student convener for NUS-USI was elected (Martin Magee, College of Business Studies, Belfast), and in the 1990s European Union funds were secured to establish a student community relations programs. Despite a Government move to introduce a voluntary membership scheme for Students’ Unions across the UK, NUS-USI successfully campaigned to exempt local unions from this legislation and was successful in winning Department of Education funding to resource its anti-prejudice work. From a staffing complement of one full-time and one part-time post in 1994, NUS-USI grew to employ seven full-time staff and a full-time student convener, accessing over £1.5m in external grants during the next decade.

Together with local Students’ Unions, NUS-USI now provides a comprehensive range of services encompassing for example student discount card schemes; student advice projects; managing diversity and student mental health programs. Recognized by Government and institutions as a major stakeholder in tertiary education provision, NUS-USI continues to meet the needs of an increasingly diverse and demanding membership.

Students’ Unions in Northern Ireland have come a long way since their original establishment as debating and representative fora and are firmly ingrained in the democratic and commercial fabric of post-school education. This overview of their historical development suggests that Students’ Unions have been responsive to the needs of their members and despite the protestations of a vocal minority ideologically opposed to collectivism, continue to enjoy the support of a broad spectrum of student opinion supported by the high level of services and political stability provided by both NUSUK and USI.

NUS-USI President

Past Convenors
Years of office Name College of Origin
2011–2012 Adrianne Peltz SERC.
2010–2011 Ciarnan Helferty Queen's University Belfast Students' Union.
2009–2010 Ciarnan Helferty Queen's University Belfast Students' Union.
2008–2009 Katie Morgan University of Ulster, Coleraine
2007–2008 Katie Morgan University of Ulster, Coleraine
2006–2007 Colleen Dowdall University of Ulster, Magee
2005–2006 Damien Kavanagh Queen's University Belfast Students' Union.
2004–2005 Damien Kavanagh Queen's University Belfast Students' Union.
2003–2004 Ben Archibald Queen's University Belfast Students' Union.
2002–2003 Ben Archibald Queen's University Belfast Students' Union.
2001–2002 Brian Slevin Queen's University Belfast Students' Union.
2000–2001 Brian Slevin Queen's University Belfast Students' Union.
1999–2000 Shane Whelehan University of Ulster, Belfast
1998–1999 Maurice Dickson North Down and Ards
1997–1998 Nigel O'Connor Queen's University Belfast Students' Union.
1996–1997 Denis Carson Belfast Institute
1995–1996 Denis Carson Belfast Institute
1994–1995 Gerard Green Queen's University Belfast Students' Union.
1993–1994 Gerard Green Queen's University Belfast Students' Union
1992–1993 Paul McMenamin Queen's University Belfast Students' Union
1991–1992 Richie Carruthers BIFHE [BIFHE follows the amalgamation of COBS, Rupert Stanley and College of Technology] Students' Union
1990–1991 Shauneen Armstrong College of Business Studies Students' Union [COBS]

External links

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