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The crisis in UK higher education is a national security issue

<榴莲视频 class="standfirst">The UK cannot enter an era of heightened geopolitical instability without high levels of social resilence, say Katharine Wright and Megan Armstrong
三月 4, 2025
A missile with a mortar board, symbolising universities' role in national security
Source: natatravel/iStock

Universities’ important role in national defence is undisputed, but the breadth of that importance is typically overlooked.

Research in the physical sciences often has applications in defence technology even when it hasn’t been undertaken with that specific goal in mind. And, in that sense, you might argue that as long as those subjects are protected, the bombshells about job cuts that are seemingly being dropped every day, across the UK, are not a national security threat. But you’d be wrong.

The value of social sciences, arts and humanities to national defence may not be immediately obvious, but it can’t be overstated. Defence is not just about soldiers and technology. It is also about – which, as , includes factors such as the ability to withstand coercion and interference through disinformation campaigns.

In that regard, the critical thinking skills instilled by the social sciences, arts and humanities are vital as . As , UK universities, and in particular the humanities, play a vital role in educating both future leaders and the wider public, not just through research and teaching, but also through public engagement and knowledge dissemination.

Moreover, national resilience is not only about the ability to respond to the threats that a state can predict. Even more important is the ability to respond to less predictable shocks – to imagine the unimaginable. And that is where the research skills of historians and the imaginations of creatives come in.

This value is already being harnessed by Nato – which has , in order not only to engage the public but also to provide insight for Nato leaders on future threats.

The importance of social resilience was in a recent oral statement on national security. At a time of rising geopolitical uncertainty, which threatens more direct conflicts and more shocks to the international system, “We will have to ask British industry, British universities, British businesses, and the British people to play a bigger part,” he said; “use this to renew the social contract of our nation, the rights and responsibilities that we owe one another”.

This spring’s (SDR) presents a crucial opportunity to formally acknowledge higher education as a strategic pillar of national security. And along with Starmer’s remarks in the House of Commons, Durham University chancellor strongly suggests that academia’s contributions to defence will indeed be considered.

However, even as Starmer announced a last week, he is doing nothing to prevent the ongoing disintegration of the UK’s world-class research capacity across the disciplines.?

By 2025-26, the Office for Students predicts that 72 per cent of UK universities will be in deficit, and the consequences of that for university staffing are already abundantly clear. Even Russell Group universities such as Newcastle, Cardiff and? Edinburgh?have announced big cuts in recent weeks, and the group’s chair, Newcastle’s Chris Day, has warned that what we have seen so far is only the “the tip of the iceberg if something isn’t done in the immediate future”, with “the potential for institutional failures” very real.?

A robust civil defence plan relies on an ability to mobilise significant civilian capacity, including medics, technology experts and logistics professionals. The funding crisis in higher education threatens this capacity. How can the UK fully contribute to a collective Nato defence scenario when??degrees are?being cut? How can it respond to global adversaries, or engage with partners, if it lacks ?

Clearly, a fundamental rethink of higher education funding is necessary across the UK. Yet the government has shifted responsibility on to universities, with England’s education secretary, Bridget Phillipson,? for a “re-examination of business models and much less wasteful spending”.

If the government allows universities to shrink, deprioritise key disciplines or even collapse completely, it will actively undermine the UK’s ability to defend itself, not just in conventional warfare but also against hybrid threats. We would risk entering an era of heightened geopolitical instability underprepared and with an under-informed population, a vulnerability that no serious defence strategy can afford.

Investing in higher education is not a luxury. It is a national security imperative.

is a senior lecturer and is a lecturer in international politics at Newcastle University.?

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<榴莲视频 class="pane-title"> Reader's comments (5)
"The value of social sciences, arts and humanities to national defence may not be immediately obvious, but it can’t be overstated. Defence is not just about soldiers and technology." Vlad was laughing at us the other day, claiming the UK army could fit into Wembley Stadium. The argument from necessity is, to be honest, rather a weak one for Arts and Humanities? How many of those in the Arts and Humanities really think that anything they do in terms of teaching and research has anything remotely connected with national defence? I think I would feel safer (though probably not much) if the government spends resource on hardware and personnel. I suppose we could put on some courses preparing our students for military service if the draft comes back? How does this leave those specializing in 'Peace Studies', I wonder?
We already have a number of courses in British Universities aimed at military service, and in fact a number of HE courses aimed at "uniformed service". The research in the humanities has a great deal to offer our military services, which is recognised by the atmed forces, from logistics to sociological studies of how different grouos of people move/respond in different environments. As far as peace studies go, they have a lot to offer our armed forces from a strategic point of view.
We already have a number of courses in British Universities aimed at military service, and in fact a number of HE courses aimed at "uniformed service". The research in the humanities has a great deal to offer our military services, which is recognised by the atmed forces, from logistics to sociological studies of how different grouos of people move/respond in different environments.
Well good luck with that!
STEM develop critical thinking better than any other subject - and, in the bargain, teach numeracy and ability to recognise hard realities.
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