Durham Students' Union

Coordinates: 54°46′24″N 1°34′18″W / 54.77333°N 1.57167°W / 54.77333; -1.57167

Durham Students' Union
Institution Durham University
Location Dunelm House, Durham, United Kingdom
Established 1899 as Durham Students Representative Council
Sabbatical officers
  • President: Alice Dee
  • Academic Affairs Officer: Lisa Whiting
  • Activities Officer: Kara-Jane Senior Community Officer: Jo Gower Development Officer: Adam Jarvis

[1]

Trustees
  • Alice Dee, Adam Jarvis, Jo Gower, Kara-Jane Senior, Lisa Whiting (sabbatical trustees)
  • David Evans, Daniel Fox, Holly Foxon, Charles Walker (student trustees)
  • Anthony Baker (Chair), Oliver Colling, Martin Parker, Louise Shillinglaw (co-opted trustees)

[2]

Members c. 17,500
Affiliations National Union of Students,
Website Durham Students' Union homepage

Durham Students' Union, commonly referred to as the DSU, is the students' union of Durham University in Durham, England. It is an organisation, originally set up as the Durham Colleges Students’ Representative Council in 1899 and renamed in 1969, with the intention of representing and providing welfare and services for the students of the University of Durham.

Location

Durham Students' Union's building, Dunelm House

The Students' Union occupies and manages Dunelm House, a university-owned building in the centre of Durham where a wide variety of student activities take place. Designed by Architects Co-Partnership, the Brutalist, angular concrete building was completed in 1966 under the supervision of architect Sir Ove Arup, whose Kingsgate Bridge, adjacent, opened two years earlier. Built into the steeply sloping bank of the River Wear, Dunelm House is notable internally for the fact that the main staircase linking all five levels of the building runs in an entirely straight line. This was intended by the building's architects to create the feeling of an interior street.[3]

In 1968 Dunelm House won a Civic Trust award,[4] though it has been described by students as "The ugliest building in Durham".[5] On the other hand, Sir Nikolaus Pevsner, the noted architecture historian, considered the building, "Brutalist by tradition but not brutal to the landscape ... the elements, though bold, [are] sensitively composed."[3] Durham City Council's Local Plan notes that the "powerful" building, together with Kingsgate Bridge, "provides an exhilarating pedestrian route ... out into open space over the river gorge".[6]

Services

Welfare

The SU provides a number of student welfare services, in addition to those provided by the University. To that end, it employs full-time trained advisors who work in the Advice Centre, runs the Nightbus that ensures students can get home safely and organises "associations" for specific minority groups of students whose interests are deemed to require additional non-collegiate provision. There are currently four associations - Mature, International, LGBT+ and Students with Disabilities

Social events

During the late 1960s and the 1970s Dunelm House was a popular music venue, hosting bands including Pink Floyd, Wishbone Ash and Procol Harum. According to their drummer Simon Kirke, Free's most popular song All Right Now was written by bassist Andy Fraser and singer Paul Rodgers in their dressing room in Dunelm House, after a set of slower material had failed to excite the audience.[7]

The SU organises the annual Welcome Ball early in the first term as well as hosting social events for student groups and organizations in Riverside Bar throughout the year.

Societies

Durham Students' Union is notable for the high number of ratified societies it supports. There are currently over 230 registered student groups. A full and up-to-date list of the DSU's societies can be found on the Durham Students' Union website.

DUCK

Unlike many students' unions, Durham Students' Union does not have "RAG week", but instead, DUCK - Durham University Charities' Kommittee - organises charitable events and activities throughout the year.

A story recently discovered in the DSU archive relates that in 1978 DUCK held a competition to find the most unpopular student in Durham with the intention of throwing them in the river. At the time the story went to print the student officers were the front runners.

DUCK was formed in the 1960s to raise money for local, national and international charities. It runs a number of expeditions to destinations including India, Kilimanjaro and Jordan.

Relation to colleges

Durham University is a collegiate university and therefore the role of the central students' union is different from most other universities. Each of Durham's colleges has its own student representative body, known in most colleges as the Junior Common Room, which provides services and organises events within the college; while many decisions within the central Students' Union are made with the involvement of JCR SU Representatives. This gives the DSU an avenue for encouraging involvement not available to SU's in most universities; but also limits participation, as many people choose to get involved with their JCR, which deals with many of the issues with immediate effects on their lives, instead of the central SU. This has led to the DSU being named the fifth worst Student Union in the country.[8]

Future

The announcement in early 2005 that the DSU had been operating with a large annual loss has prompted serious debate on the future of the organisation and the building in which it is currently based. According to Durham's student newspaper, Palatinate, the DSU's debt to the bank and its parent institution stood at £303,000 in June 2005. Restructuring of the organisation followed and resulted in a small surplus being posted for the year 2005/06. In 2007/08 a reorganisation took place, which resulted in the adoption of a new constitution. Governance of the DSU was also updated with the introduction of a Board of Trustees consisting of the five student officers, four elected student trustees and five co-opted trustees.

On a number of occasions, some have suggested have that the DSU might disaffiliate from the NUS,[9] however until 2009 none of those opposed to affiliation had pushed the issue to a full student debate and vote. In 2009 however, a referendum took place proposing that the DSU should stay affiliated to the NUS. Students voted convincingly in favour of affiliation with 80% (2564) of students who voted voting to stay affiliated and 20% (624) voting to disaffiliate.[10]

Shortly after this, controversy arose regarding a planned debate, "Multiculturalism in Britain", at the Durham Union Society, which was to involve a recently elected BNP MEP, and which was subsequently cancelled over alleged fears for student safety, reopened the issue of NUS affiliation. A petition for a second referendum was put before the Union [11] and on 12 March 2010, the referendum concluded with a majority of voting students voting to disaffiliate from the NUS,[12] meaning that Durham Student Union disaffiliated from the NUS after the end of the 2009-2010 academic year.[13]

A third referendum on NUS affiliation was held in January 2011 with 60% of students voting to reaffiliate with NUS.[14]

Notable former officers

A number of notable figures have been involved in Durham Students' Union in the past. These include:

References

  1. "Student Officers". Durham SU. Durham SU. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  2. "Board Of Trustees". Durham SU. Durham SU. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  3. 1 2 Pevsner, Nikolaus, The Buildings of England: County Durham (2nd ed. 1983, revised by Elizabeth Williamson), Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin Books Ltd, pp.233-234
  4. Architects Co-Partnership, "Awards and Commendations", accessed 28 October 2006
  5. The Tab Durham, "We asked people what they thought of the DSU building", accessed 25 October 2016
  6. Durham City Council, City of Durham Local Plan, accessed 5 November 2006
  7. Mckay, Neil (5 November 2008). "All Right Now for Free tribute show". The Journal. Newcastle.
  8. The Tab, , accessed 25 October 2016
  9. Hannah Costigan, "Durham to pull out of NUS", Palatinate, accessed 28 October 2006
  10. DeVote online voting system, accessed 27 November 2009
  11. Vincent McAviney & Jodie Smith, "Security concerns stifle free speech", Palatinate, accessed 8 February 2010
  12. http://vote.dsu.org.uk/index.cgi/results/51 DeVote online voting - Results
  13. Ben Robertson,"NUS Referendum Results Announced"
  14. DeVote Online Voting
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