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Northumbria's inaugural Equality, Diversity and Inclusion
(EDI) conference was held in June, showcasing the intersectional and
interdisciplinary approaches that the Northumbria community takes to ensuring
the University is an inclusive place to work and study. The event was
opened by Vice-Chancellor and Chief Executive Andy Long and featured key-note
speakers, workshops, presentations, seminars, and networking
opportunities. Approximately 200 people attended the event including
colleagues, students and regional partners.
Following a call for contributors to showcase research or
an interdisciplinary approach to EDI, highlight lived experience or facilitate
a workshop, over thirty expressions of interest were received from groups and
individuals, who were all offered a space to exhibit their work, through
presentations, workshop or as part of the project library. Participants were able to sign up for the
various sessions in the agenda. Inclusion and accessibility were
embedded into planning, with the provision of parenting facilities, prayer and
quiet spaces throughout the day.
A selection of recordings, slides and posters are
provided on the conference web page for
those who were unable to attend.
Our second Shine Awards took place in June 2024, to
celebrate colleagues and teams across the University who are committed to our
Values and who personify our Behaviours.
One of the five
awards is the Inclusivity Award which is for colleagues and teams who
recognise, value and celebrate our diversity and collective expertise; and who
practise and promote fairness, transparency and mutual respect, asking for
and listening to feedback so that they can learn and improve. An
outstanding 204 nominations were received, exceeding the 179 received last
year.
Our worthy
winners were presented with their award by members of the University Executive
Team and all those shortlisted were also presented with a certificate in
recognition of their outstanding contributions and commitment to embracing
Northumbria Values and Behaviours.
Disability Awareness dates
During
Disability History Month we provided online resources signposting to e-learning
on Mental Health Language Awareness, a HIV and AIDS Awareness session for World
AIDS day, Reasonable Adjustments Training and a session by Law Colleagues on
Disability Discrimination in the Workplace. We also signposted to the support offered by the Student Accessibility
Team, including how to request an assessment for Dyslexia or another Specific
Learning Difficulty.
We
marked Neurodiversity Celebration week with a Supporting Neurodivergent Team
Members session facilitated by Lexxic aimed at line mangers. In May we
published information about Global Accessibility Awareness Day and promoted the
Accessibility Toolkits for staff and students and highlighted the work of the
Digital Accessibility Working Group.
The Library piloted tours for neurodivergent
students which following the success of the pilot has been developed
into an established service for the new academic year. The team worked
with the Neurodiverse Students President to develop these tours and handout
materials. Feedback received so far has been very positive.
Menopause
Awareness
Multiple menopause events and sessions took place across the
year, including training for line managers and Business and Laws’ Menopause Cafe. In
Health and Life Sciences a Women’s Health Champion has been introduced to
develop peer support across the Faculty.
The Department of Geography and Environmental Sciences
received a request from the EDI Caucus project at Heriot-Watt to become a test
site for its wor
k on menstrual health and (peri)menopause in a work setting.
During a co-design workshop in July 2024, suggestions on improving working
culture were made which were focussed on normalising practices and
discussions.
International
Women's Day Events
A range of events were held to celebrate
International Women’s Day. The Northumbria Women's Network arranged a
networking lunch to discuss the network's
purpose and future direction. A
screening was arranged of ‘Rattle Snake’, a theatre production by Open Clasp,
which shows real-life stories of women who have faced and survived coercive
controlling domestic abuse. The University IDRT lead presented the Group’s work
on Gender Violence and Abuse. A talk by Alex Knight, the Founder & CEO of
STEMAZING, a non-profit social enterprise dedicated to promoting Inspiration
and Inclusion in STEM. was hosted in Engineering and Environment. Alex spoke about common barriers to diversity
and inclusion and how we can all be a part of the solution.
International
Day for the Elimination of Violence
As part of the annual international campaign, the 16
Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence we held a second screening
of the powerful ‘Rattle Snake’ production with Open Clasp. The annual campaign
originating from the Women's Global Leadership Institute in 1991, the annual
international campaign commences on November 25, the International Day for the
Elimination of Violence against Women, and concludes on December 10, Human
Rights Day.
LGBTQ+ Awareness dates
During LGBTQ+ History Month in February, a range
of events were held on campus. These
included the Assemblage III Programme initiated by the Fine Arts Team, a series
of public events designed to be part of and cultivate the local contemporary
art scene in Newcastle and the surrounding region. A screening of 120BPM was held in
collaboration with UNISON’s Year of the LGBT+ Worker. We offered two ‘T in Transgender’ workshops
and funding for six places on an online webinar ‘Is Sport a Safe Place for
LGBTQ+ Women and Non-Binary Participants’.
Various
LGBTQ+ events were marked throughout the year including Trans Day of
Visibility, Lesbian Visibility Week, International Non-Binary People’s Day and
Bi-Visibility Day and IDAHOBIT with online information, resources and
signposting. During LGBTQ+ Pride Month in June, rainbow banners were raised
across campus celebrating Northumbria as a LGBTQ+ friendly campus.
PRIDE Breakfast 2024
Northumbria’s annual PRIDE Breakfast was once again a great success,
hosted in Habita by the Student Union, and supported by the LGBTQ* Staff
Network and the EDI Team. Participants
enjoyed a varied breakfast, face painting, therapy dogs, music, karaoke,
giveaways as well as participating in crafts and banner making before leaving
to join the PRIDE march from the Civic Centre.
Pandon Building Meeting Rooms
The Pandon Building is the primary hub for Professional Services teams
at Northumbria. The four floors of the
building are themed over continents with meeting rooms named after major cities
on each continent where the University has business and research links.
Members of the LGBTQ+ community expressed concerns about a small number
of rooms which were named after locations where being LGBTQ+ is illegal, and
the LGBTQ+ law is not reflective of the UK’s position. This did not align with
Northumbria’s values as an LGBTQ+ inclusive campus, and in the summer rooms on
the Lower Ground Floor were renamed after cities which the University has
business links with, where no one can be criminalised for their LGBTQ+
identity.
To
broaden colleague knowledge, we hosted two awareness sessions; an Islamophobia
awareness session delivered by Tell MAMA, and an Antisemitism awareness session
organised by the Community Security Trust and the Union of Jewish Students.
We
hosted the Fate Unknown exhibition from the Weiner Holocaust Library, inviting
colleagues from the Library to provide a public lecture and exhibition viewing
in November.
We
hosted the ‘We are here: Inspirational Women’ exhibition, with
content created by the Discovery Museum’s community-led Exchange
Steering Group. The exhibition showcased inspirational
stories of exceptional women who enrich north-east communities
in medicine, healthcare, science, education, activism and
politics.
ADSS
held screening of Inner Gods, a locally made film, reflecting on the effects of
the Covid pandemic, the death of George Floyd and the Black Lives Matter
movement.
We have
continued our participation in the ongoing Pro:North East project. The project
involves the five universities in the North-East, widening access and
participation for racially minoritised students and staff in postgraduate
research.
We also
continued our support for the Gypsy, Traveller, Roma, Showman & Boaters
(GTRSB) Pledge, and hosted a talk on “The circus: a personal research journey”.
A series of videos to celebrate cultural diversity were created by the student ambassadors. These were based on the human or
living library concept and involved short interviews with students discussing
their culture and heritage and what it means to them, their sense of belonging
within the University and what we can do better as a University and as a
Library.
Amplifying
Inclusion
The Amplifying Inclusion: Research and Conversation
series continued into 23/24 for a second series featuring three episodes, the
final featuring as part of the NU EDI Conference 2024.
- Series 2 Episode 1 ‘Voice, Autonomy and Inclusion’
- Series 2 Episode 2 ‘Making Experiences Visible’
- Series 2 Episode 3 ‘Amplifying Inclusion through
Research, Network and Projects’
The series was borne from the desire to facilitate
conversations which enlighten, express, and engage attendees in topics relevant
to equity, diversity, social justice, and activism. It provides a platform to
uncover and amplify the truths found in research and practice, whilst supplying
a shared space for our students and colleagues to listen, absorb and discuss.
Across the year, 115 colleagues and students attended
Amplifying Inclusion.
Quiet Spaces
Two dedicated quiet rooms were
introduced in the Business and Law Building this year to provide spaces for
people to rest, relax, meditate, pray, or take time to recharge. More widely a brief is being developed for the
provision of further quiet and sensory spaces across the campus.
Professional Services
Community
A new Professional Services Community
(PSC) was established in Business and Law for Faculty and Faculty-aligned
Professional, Technical and Operational colleagues, aimed towards raising
awareness of, and building respect for one another’s roles. The Group has met
twice during the reporting period.
To support
Network Co-chairs in serving their communities and developing resilience and
capacity within the Networks, we invited EMBED Inclusion in to deliver a
bespoke session ‘The Power of EDI Staff Networks’ to empower Co-chairs and
support them in the valuable work they do in the employee networks.
Black, Asian and Minority
Ethnic (BAME) Staff and PGR Network
Over the past year the Network has continued to grow,
welcoming new members.
In 2023 the Network published a statement on the topic of
Where Are You Really From. This question can often by followed by "No,
where are you really from?" A seemingly straightforward line of
questioning, what can appear to be a perfectly innocuous thing to ask can make
people feel uncomfortable, frustrated and "othered". The statement was intended to help employees
at Northumbria University understand the daily experiences of network members, supposedly
minor moments that shape our everyday lives, and how they have to navigate through spaces that on the surface
appear to be safe but can be rife with complexity.
The
Network also discussed the Baroness Casey Review, a review into the standards
of behaviour and internal culture of the Metropolitan Police Service. The findings are relevant to any large
institution active within the United Kingdom today. It is important to note
that it is the tenacity of people of colour and women in disclosing their
experiences and challenging the behaviour that has led to this important
inquiry, reinforcing why Networks like ours are important.
The Away Day in December 2023 was the Network’s first
opportunity to meet collectively since the beginning of the BAME Network. The
objectives of the meeting were to revisit the Network ethos and Terms of
Reference; to explore what members can do as a collective ‘by us and for us’;
to re-consider the naming of the Network; to understand the range of member’s
expectations, against what the university is doing; and to build capacity
amongst the Network to effect change.
Parent and Carer’s Network
This year, the Network expanded its operations by
establishing ‘Dad Chat’ and ‘Mum Chat’ as social forums that normalised open
discussion of parenthood amongst colleagues in various departments in the
University. The Network continues to offer a daily space for parents and carers
to support each other and share resources that equalise knowledge of relevant
policies and statutory entitlements.
The Chair of the network has been active in a national
scale research project connecting the Northumbria University Network with other
parents and carers networks across the UK higher education sector. The project
has culminated in the creation of a toolkit for parents and carers
members. The Chair has now become
co-chair of the national network of Parents and Carers Networks in HEIs known
as UK PACT (Parents and Carers Together).
In June 2024, a day workshop was held that brought
parents and carers networks together in person in Newcastle upon Tyne. This
burgeoning community will increasingly work together to speak for parents and
carers across the UK HEI sector.
Based on the ties that have been fostered between UK
networks, we recently shared a UCAS guide for student parents that
was developed at Chester University. The
Network encourages this guide to be disseminated to all programme leaders via
the EDI Faculty directors.
In September and July of the academic year, the Network
invited all members to join a social gathering to encourage a sense of
community and belonging between parents and carers. There are plans to introduce a new Carer’s
Network that will be institutionally aligned and should offer fresh impetus to
create a community for carer colleagues at Northumbria University.
Women’s
Network
The Women’s Network have a Steering Group who have held
monthly meetings to discuss the organisation of new events and identify a
themes and actions.
The Women's
Network have an active Teams site which has been developed to support
communication across University.
An event was held for International Women’s Day, with a
viewing of a documentary and discussion around the results of a survey that
aimed to restructure the NU Women’s Network as a space for women's inclusion
and belonging within Northumbria.
LGBTQ+ Network
The Network has continued to be a valuable source of support to its’ members. This year the Network revised its leadership and expanded the Number of Co-Chairs to five. Terms of reference were redefined to reflect the needs of the members; Support – Connect – Represent – Empower. Co-chairs met with colleagues in the University Executive and Governance to discuss freedom of speech in relation to gender critical debates on campus, to agree appropriate levels of communication with the Networks so that those affected by such debates can be supported.
The Network has continued to provide Pride themed lanyards to colleagues, raised Pride Banners across the campus during Pride Month and supported the Pride Annual Breakfast in July, held in collaboration with the Student Union. The Network benefits from close links with Unison, members attended Unison’s LGBTQ Workers Lesbian Visibility Day event, and the IDAHOBIT event at the Civic Centre. They also hosted an interactive poster presentation on ‘What Makes you Proud?’ at the EDI Conference.
Belonging in Sport
Northumbria
Sport are continuously looking to develop activity that fosters inclusion and
creates a sense of belonging for our students. After an extremely successful
launch in January 2023 through accessing BUCS Active 5 funding, Northumbria
Sport committed to continuing our Intramural Kwik Cricket League in 2023/24.
Through reducing the barrier of travel and providing all equipment, we were
able to engage with 48 students 73.3% being postgraduate students and over 90%
being from ethnic minority groups.
In August 2023
Northumbria Sport were successful in a joint application for the BUCS Referee
Development Fund with Newcastle University, which upskilled 16 referees with
50% being from widening participation groups. This enabled our leagues to be
officiated by the referees who completed the course, which will contribute
creating an environment that champions inclusion and a sense of
belonging.
Northumbria
Sport were also delighted to support the rainbow laces campaign which saw over
400 laces worn in our sport clubs in October, this underlined our commitment to
ensure all our students feel a sense of belonging with our clubs. Over the next
academic year, we will introduce our Wellbeing Walks programme that will give
students the opportunity to explore Newcastle with facilitate walking sessions.
These sessions will specifically target our underrepresented groups to ensure
all student feel included in sport at the University.
Return to main EDI Report page.