Birmingham City University has announced plans to withdraw its MA in Black Studies and Global Justice from September 2026, citing low student recruitment as the primary driver. The decision comes just eight months after the postgraduate programme launched and follows the closure of the university’s undergraduate Black Studies degree in 2024. With only eight students currently enrolled, the institution described the move as part of a broader review of its postgraduate portfolio aimed at ensuring financial sustainability.
Background on Birmingham City University’s Black Studies Initiatives
The undergraduate Black Studies programme at Birmingham City University represented the first dedicated degree of its kind in Europe when it began in 2017. Developed under the leadership of academics including Professor Kehinde Andrews, the course sought to centre Black intellectual traditions, histories, and contemporary experiences within the UK higher education landscape. It built on earlier efforts such as the Blackness in Britain conferences and the establishment of the Black Studies Association. The MA in Black Studies and Global Justice extended this work into postgraduate study, examining themes of decolonisation, social justice, and global Black diasporic connections.
University leaders have emphasised that the programme attracted limited demand at master’s level. Officials noted that a small number of other postgraduate courses are also being withdrawn for similar reasons. They stated they are exploring alternative provision to support students already on the course and to maintain some engagement with the subject area.
Staff and Student Reactions to the Closure Announcement
Staff members involved in delivering the MA described feeling blindsided by the February decision, which was communicated without prior consultation. Five Black members of academic staff now face potential redundancy as a direct consequence of the programme’s withdrawal. Critics argue that the timing and framing of the cuts contradict the university’s public commitments to equality, diversity and inclusion.
Current students have expressed concerns about disrupted academic pathways and the loss of specialised supervision. The abrupt nature of the announcement has raised questions about how institutions balance portfolio management with support for emerging fields of study that serve underrepresented communities.
International Academic Response and Open Letter
More than 100 academics, writers and activists from across the world signed an open letter urging Birmingham City University to reverse its decision. Signatories highlighted the programme’s unique contribution to UK scholarship and warned that its closure risks erasing dedicated space for Black intellectual inquiry. The letter emphasised the importance of sustaining such programmes amid wider pressures on humanities and social science provision.
Prominent voices, including US civil rights scholar Kimberlé Crenshaw, drew explicit connections between the Birmingham City University situation and ongoing debates in the United States over diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. Crenshaw described the move as carrying a “dangerous parallel” with campaigns that have sought to limit or eliminate race-related academic programmes across the Atlantic.
Parallels with Developments in US Higher Education
In the United States, several states have introduced legislation restricting diversity, equity and inclusion offices and programmes at public universities. Institutions in Florida, Texas and Kentucky have consolidated or restructured African American Studies and related departments, often citing budget constraints or alignment with new state policies. Enrolment data following changes to affirmative action admissions have shown declines in Black student numbers at selective institutions, correlating with reduced demand for certain specialised majors.
UK observers note that while the regulatory and funding environments differ markedly, the language of low recruitment and financial viability appears in both contexts. The Birmingham City University case has therefore been positioned by some commentators as part of a wider pattern in which programmes focused on race and identity face heightened scrutiny during periods of institutional retrenchment.
Broader Context of Funding Pressures in UK Higher Education
Universities across the United Kingdom continue to navigate significant financial challenges. Domestic tuition fees have remained frozen for several years while inflation and staff costs have risen. International student recruitment, a key revenue source for many institutions, has become more volatile following changes to visa rules and post-study work rights. Reviews of course portfolios have become commonplace as leaders seek to align offerings with student demand and institutional priorities.
Postgraduate taught programmes in the arts, humanities and social sciences have proved particularly vulnerable in this environment. Smaller cohorts often struggle to cover delivery costs, prompting difficult decisions about which subjects receive continued investment. Black Studies, as a relatively new and specialised field, has been especially exposed to these pressures.
Impact on Students, Staff and the Wider Academic Community
The immediate effects of the closure fall most heavily on the small cohort of current MA students, whose studies and future plans have been thrown into uncertainty. Staff facing redundancy include scholars whose expertise is difficult to replace within the UK system, where Black academics remain significantly underrepresented at senior levels.
Beyond Birmingham City University, the episode has prompted wider discussion about the sustainability of niche programmes that address the histories and experiences of minority ethnic communities. Supporters argue that such courses contribute to a more inclusive curriculum and help universities meet equality objectives. Detractors point to the need for rigorous assessment of viability in an era of constrained resources.
Perspectives from Key Figures in the Field
Professor Kehinde Andrews, a leading proponent of Black Studies in Britain, has publicly criticised the university’s handling of the situation. He has argued that the programme was never given adequate marketing or resourcing to succeed and that claims of insufficient demand do not reflect the true level of interest. Andrews and colleagues have called for greater transparency in decision-making processes that affect programmes with explicit equality remits.
Other academics have stressed the value of maintaining dedicated intellectual spaces even when student numbers are modest, noting that Black Studies has historically operated with limited institutional support yet produced influential scholarship and community engagement.
Future Outlook for Black Studies in UK Universities
The closure at Birmingham City University raises questions about the long-term prospects for Black Studies across the sector. While some institutions continue to offer modules or pathways within broader degrees in sociology, history or cultural studies, dedicated programmes remain rare. The loss of both undergraduate and postgraduate routes at one of the pioneering institutions has intensified calls for collective action to protect and expand the field.
Advocates are exploring options including partnerships between universities, external funding streams and revised delivery models that might combine online and in-person elements. Whether these efforts can reverse the current trajectory remains to be seen.
Implications for Diversity and Representation in Academia
The episode underscores ongoing challenges around representation. Black academics constitute a small proportion of the UK professoriate, and the redundancy of five Black staff members at Birmingham City University has been highlighted as particularly concerning. Critics contend that decisions of this nature can have a chilling effect on recruitment and retention of scholars from minority ethnic backgrounds.
Universities are under increasing pressure to demonstrate progress on equality charters and access targets. The tension between these commitments and the practical realities of course viability is likely to remain a live issue in higher education policy discussions.
