Deliberative Democracy Enters UK Campuses
Staff and students at the University of Westminster have pioneered a fresh approach to institutional decision-making by convening the United Kingdom’s first university-based citizens’ assembly focused on climate action. The initiative demonstrates how randomly selected groups drawn from across a university community can generate practical recommendations on complex issues facing higher education.
The model draws on established practices of citizens’ assemblies, in which a representative cross-section of participants learns about a topic through expert input, discusses options in facilitated small groups, and produces collective recommendations. At Westminster the process involved six sessions between January and March 2026, culminating in 51 recommendations submitted to senior leaders.
The Westminster Climate Assembly in Detail
More than 300 members of the university community applied to take part. Forty-five participants were ultimately selected through a democratic lottery designed to reflect the institution’s diversity in gender, ethnicity, disability status, academic or professional role, and level of concern about climate change. The group included students, academics, professional services staff and contractors.
Trained student facilitators guided discussions. The central question posed to the assembly was how the university and its community could advance meaningful climate action while also improving the experience of studying and working at the institution. Recommendations covered curriculum development, operational changes and the responsible use of artificial intelligence, including calls for greater AI literacy and clearer guidance on when the technology should not be deployed because of its environmental footprint.
Vice-chancellor Professor Peter Bonfield welcomed the output and committed to working with the community on implementation. Deputy vice-chancellor Dibyesh Anand emphasised the importance of accountability mechanisms to ensure recommendations translate into action rather than remaining aspirational.
Why Citizens’ Assemblies Are Gaining Attention in Higher Education
UK universities currently navigate a range of interconnected pressures. These include financial sustainability amid changing student recruitment patterns, the need to embed sustainability across operations and teaching, rapid developments in artificial intelligence, evolving expectations around equity and inclusion, and questions about governance structures that can feel distant from day-to-day campus life.
Traditional committee-based decision-making often operates within established hierarchies. Citizens’ assemblies offer an alternative by placing participants on equal footing regardless of their formal role. Proponents argue this creates space for perspectives that might otherwise remain unheard, such as those of catering staff, security personnel or students balancing part-time work with study.
Replicating the Model Beyond Climate
Participants in the Westminster assembly have already reported interest from colleagues at institutions including King’s College London and Kingston University. While every university would adapt the format to its own context, the underlying principles remain consistent: random selection for representativeness, structured learning, facilitated deliberation and transparent follow-up.
Potential applications include reviews of curriculum reform, strategies for widening participation, approaches to staff wellbeing, or the development of ethical frameworks for emerging technologies. The process can surface trade-offs and build broader ownership of outcomes because recommendations emerge from a microcosm of the wider community rather than from senior management alone.
Photo by Michael D Beckwith on Unsplash
Stakeholder Perspectives on the Approach
Ro Spankie, a principal lecturer in architecture and one of the initiative’s originators, noted that the model provides an alternative to simply raising tuition fees as a solution to financial challenges. She highlighted the value of genuine deliberation among equals in contrast to conventional committee structures.
Stuart Farrell, a head chef who participated, initially approached the process with scepticism but found the diversity of viewpoints illuminating and constructive. Yasmin Kulasi, associate head of Westminster Business School, described the experience as opening up possibilities for collaboration across the entire university body.
External observers have pointed to similar experiments at universities in France, Denmark, the Netherlands and Switzerland as evidence that the format can travel successfully across different national higher-education systems.
Practical Considerations for Implementation
Running a citizens’ assembly requires careful planning around recruitment, facilitation, information provision and follow-through. Costs can be significant, though Westminster benefited from support by the Quintin Hogg Trust. Institutions must also establish clear mechanisms for responding to recommendations so that participants see their input reflected in subsequent decisions.
Key design choices include the precise framing of the question, the balance between expert testimony and participant discussion, and the degree of authority granted to the final recommendations. Experience from national and local assemblies elsewhere in the UK suggests that perceived legitimacy increases when organisers commit in advance to a transparent response process.
Broader Implications for the Sector
If more universities adopt the approach, it could contribute to a shift in institutional culture toward greater participatory governance. This aligns with wider societal interest in deliberative democracy as a complement to representative structures. For a sector often criticised for top-down decision-making, the model offers one route toward rebuilding trust among staff and students.
Challenges remain. Not every issue lends itself equally well to the format, and assemblies require time and resources that stretched institutions may find difficult to allocate. Nevertheless, early indications from Westminster suggest that the benefits in terms of engagement and innovative thinking can outweigh the costs when the topic is salient to the community.
Looking Ahead
The University of Westminster assembly has concluded its formal sessions, but organisers and participants are already discussing how the experience might inform future initiatives. Interest from other institutions indicates that the idea is likely to spread. Over the coming academic year, observers will watch closely to see which recommendations are adopted and how the process influences campus culture more broadly.
For academics, administrators and prospective staff considering roles in UK higher education, the development signals a potential evolution in how universities tackle shared problems. It also underscores the sector’s willingness to experiment with democratic innovations that have proven effective in other policy domains.
Resources for Further Exploration
Those interested in learning more can consult the dedicated coverage from Times Higher Education or visit the University of Westminster’s own announcement at its news pages. Additional background on citizens’ assemblies in the UK context is available through organisations such as Involve and the Knowledge Network on Climate Assemblies.
