The Origins of the Dispute: Kathleen Stock and Campus Protests
In October 2021, the University of Sussex found itself at the center of a heated controversy when Professor Kathleen Stock resigned amid student protests. Stock, a philosopher known for her gender-critical views asserting that biological sex is real and immutable, faced significant backlash. Posters labeling her a 'transphobe' appeared on campus, and protests called for her dismissal. Although her views are protected as philosophical beliefs under the Equality Act 2010, the university supported her right to speak but could not prevent the unrest.
The Higher Education and Research Act 2017 (HERA) imposes ongoing conditions of registration on providers like Sussex. Condition E1 requires governing documents to uphold public interest governance principles for freedom of speech and academic freedom. Condition E2 demands effective management and governance arrangements. Breaches can result in monetary penalties up to 2% of a provider's qualifying income or £500,000, whichever is higher.
OfS Investigation Timeline: From Protests to Penalty
The OfS opened its investigation on October 22, 2021, shortly after Stock's resignation, focusing on whether Sussex had adequately secured freedom of speech within the law. Over the next years, the regulator examined documents, including the university's Transgender and Non-Binary Equality Policy Statement (TNBEPS), first published in November 2018. Provisional findings emerged in March 2024, with final decisions on February 14, 2025, culminating in the fine announcement on March 26, 2025.
- October 7, 2021: OfS notes protests against Stock and raises concerns.
- October 22, 2021: Formal investigation launches.
- 2022-2023: Sussex amends TNBEPS multiple times.
- March 2024: Provisional breach findings.
- February 2025: Final breach confirmation.
- March 26, 2025: £585,000 fine imposed.
This marked the OfS's first major monetary penalty for free speech issues, signaling a robust enforcement stance.
Dissecting the TNBEPS: The Policy at the Heart of the Breach
The TNBEPS aimed to promote equality but was deemed by the OfS to create a 'chilling effect' on lawful expression. Four key statements were problematic:
- Positive Representation Statement: Required course materials to 'positively represent trans people and trans lives,' potentially forcing biased content and limiting academic inquiry.
- Stereotyping Statement: Prohibited curriculum reinforcing 'stereotypical assumptions about trans people.'
- Transphobic Propaganda Statement: Declared 'transphobic propaganda will not be tolerated.'
- Disciplinary Statement: Treated 'transphobic abuse, harassment, or bullying' as serious offences, risking sanctions for protected views.
These provisions, the OfS argued, could deter staff and students from discussing gender-critical perspectives, as evidenced by Stock altering her teaching to avoid controversy. The policy conflicted with protections under Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights (freedom of expression) and section 19 of the Equality Act (indirect discrimination).
Sussex's Statute VII offered some academic freedom safeguards for staff but inadequately protected students and failed to override TNBEPS conflicts.
The Fine Explained: Calculation and Governance Failures
The £585,000 penalty split as £360,000 for E1 breach (chilling effect from 2019-2024) and £225,000 for E2 (governance lapses). The OfS calculated baselines at 0.9% and 0.5% of Sussex's £232 million qualifying income, adjusting for duration, lack of reporting, and partial mitigations like policy tweaks. Discounts applied as a first case.
Governance issues included unauthorized approvals: the 2021 Free Speech Code by Prevent Steering Group, 2023 External Speakers’ Procedure and TNBEPS versions by University Executive Group—bypassing proper delegation schemes. This pattern risked poor decisions harming students and staff.
Photo by Brett Jordan on Unsplash
Sussex's Response: Policy Revisions and Legal Pushback
Sussex cooperated, amending TNBEPS: August 2022 removed positive representation; January 2023 added academic freedom safeguards and objective 'transphobic abuse' definitions. A May 2024 version addressed more concerns, though OfS reserved judgment. The university condemned the investigation as 'Kafkaesque' and politically motivated in March 2025 statements, arguing historic breaches were overblown.
Permission for judicial review granted in October 2025, with full hearings February 3-5, 2026.
High Court Showdown: Sussex's Six Grounds of Challenge
The challenge opened before Mrs Justice Lieven, with Sussex's KC Chris Buttler arguing the OfS decision was ultra vires, wrong in law, irrational, and procedurally unfair. Key grounds include:
- TNBEPS not a 'governing document' under HERA—lacking job-affecting sanctions.
- Misinterpretation of HERA's 'freedom of speech nor academic freedom'—policy only impacts speech, not freedom.
- Irrational over-reliance on one witness (Stock) and bias via OfS Director Arif Ahmed's prior support for Stock.
- Procedural flaws: nine denied meeting requests, no student/union input, selective targeting vs. dialogue with others.
Judgment reserved as of March 2026, with sector watching closely.
OfS Defense and Broader Stakeholder Views
OfS refutes bias (Ahmed-Stock contact 'limited professional'), insists TNBEPS chilled speech, and offered early settlement if breaches admitted. Director Arif Ahmed emphasized viewpoint-neutral regulation: 'Students and academics are free to express... lawful views—even controversial ones.'
Free speech advocates like London Universities Council for Academic Freedom warn a Sussex win could cripple OfS E1 enforcement. Unions and equality groups express concerns over absolutism potentially enabling harassment.Read the full OfS case report.
Implications for UK Higher Education
This case tests OfS powers amid rising tensions between free speech and equality duties. A university victory might limit regulator scope to core governing docs, encouraging policy experimentation but risking self-censorship. An OfS win reinforces proactive enforcement, vital post-HERA amendments strengthening free speech mandates. Other unis with similar policies face review risks.
Statistics show UK campuses grappling: HESA data notes increasing academic staff concerns over expression, with 2025 surveys indicating 25% self-censoring on gender topics.
Photo by Brett Jordan on Unsplash
Future Outlook and Lessons for Universities
Judgment expected soon could reshape regulation. Unis should audit policies for chilling effects, ensure delegation compliance, and balance equality with speech rights. Proactive training on Equality Act protections for gender-critical beliefs is key. For the latest in UK higher ed regulation, check AcademicJobs UK university resources.
Advice for Academics in a Tense Climate
Professors and lecturers navigating these issues can protect careers by documenting viewpoints, seeking union support, and leveraging academic freedom clauses. Explore how to craft an academic CV emphasizing independent research, or share experiences on Rate My Professor. Job seekers, browse professor jobs and higher ed jobs prioritizing free inquiry cultures. For career guidance, visit higher ed career advice.