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A blueprint for the future? Students and experts weigh in on Greenwich-Kent university merger

Students at the University of Greenwich have voiced optimism about preliminary plans to merge their institution with the University of Kent, in a pioneering move set to establish the UK’s first multi-university group. 

From autumn 2026, if plans are approved, the two universities will be managed by a single vice-chancellor, Professor Jane Harrington, and unite more than 28,000 students across existing campuses in Greenwich, Kent and Medway.

The new university group will become the largest higher education institution in the south of England. 

During freshers’ week in Greenwich, many new undergraduates had yet to hear of the proposals. However, those that were aware of the vast undertaking of their institution were generally upbeat. 

“A new collaboration will enhance the quality of the atmosphere,” said Anju Murali, 24, a first-year pharmaceutical science student. “Exposure to other university cultures and traditions always enhances the student experience.”

Her friend Indraja, 20, who studies business analytics, agreed: “This will open doors rather than close them.”

Neither expressed concern that the scale of the new institution would diminish the student experience.

Both, however, stressed for teaching standards to remain a priority for policymakers going forward.

Anju added: “One-to-one specialism is important. Don’t compromise on teaching. We’re all here for our futures.”

The plans arrive amid a moment of financial strain across the higher education sector. Both Kent and Greenwich have contended with diminishing budgets, falling domestic recruitment, and the impact of overseas student shortfalls. 

Nick Hillman, director of the Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI), described the merger as “a very interesting initiative and possibly a trailblazer.”

Hillman speculated that the merger will allow for shared services and other cost-saving measures, which may amount to “the sum being stronger than its parts.”

British higher education is no stranger to consolidation. The Institute of Education folded into University College London in 2014 and City University joined forces with St George’s in medicine.

Before that, Queen Mary combined with Westfield College. Such partnerships often find smaller, specialist institutions absorbed into larger university structures, usually within a similar geographical region.

The proposal for Kent and Greenwich diverges from this familiar model as two sizeable, regional universities pledge to preserve their names, identities, and community links under a shared umbrella. 

Edward Venning, a specialist in higher education governance, warns that plotting the new multi-university structure must hinge upon more than financial expediency. 

He said: “What does this new university stand for, except to save money? A compelling value proposition – a reason to stand together – will steer their decision making.

“Otherwise there’s nothing to stand in the way of cultural incompatibility and poor integration… one of the main reasons why mergers fail.”

Venning added that while some services, like mental health provision, could benefit from scale, teaching quality often thrives when staff are given the agency to make decisions without layers of bureaucracy. 

He added: “The survival of the character, name and pedagogy of the institutions that they swallow depends on how they organise their governance and structure shape. There are ways to assure this, but these take money and time.”

While experts await further details to anticipate the merger’s success, the mood on campus remains buoyant.

“Change is exciting,” said Indraja. “As long as they don’t compromise on teaching, it could be really good for us.”

To its architects, the multi-university group is a bold sketch of higher education’s future to its students and the promise of something new.

Whether the merger emerges as a blueprint or footnote will hopefully become clearer by the end of the year as students await more detailed plans for the London and South East University Group.

Featured Image credit: Emily Driver

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