University of Sydney Union
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The University of Sydney Union (USU), commonly referred to as The Union, is the student-run services and amenities provider at the University of Sydney. The Union's key activities include the University's Orientation Week, entertainment services, and clubs and societies.
The University of Sydney Union provides student services and amenities and supports the university's strong debating, dramatic, and cultural traditions, through over a hundred clubs and societies. Unofficially, the University of Sydney ranks first in the world in debating ahead of Oxford and Cambridge[1]. They are the 2007 World Debating Champions, and in recent years have comprehensively dominated the finals of the Australian and Australasian Championships. Former debaters include the former Prime Minister John Howard, Justice Michael Kirby and members of the Chaser crew.
The Labor Club is the oldest political campus club in Australia. Honi Soit, run by the SRC, is the only remaining weekly student newspaper in Australia.
Contents |
[edit] History
University Parliamentary Debating |
---|
World Universities Debating Championship |
Regional Championships |
Asia · Australasia · Europe · John Smith Memorial Mace · North America |
National Championships |
Australia · Canada · Ireland |
National Organizations |
APDA · CUSID · English-Speaking Union · NPDA |
Styles |
Australasian · British Parliamentary |
Lists of debaters |
Global · Canadian · New Zealand |
Circuits |
IONA Debating Circuit |
Societies |
Cambridge · Cork · Galway · Glasgow · Limerick · Manchester · Maynooth · Otago · Ottawa · Oxford · Sydney · Tilbury House · TCD Hist · TCD Phil · UBC · UCD L&H · Victoria · Western Ontario |
The University of Sydney Union (USU) was established in 1874 for debating, at a time when the University had fewer than a hundred students; graduates and staff were thus dominant. In 1884, the University's Senate provided a common room for the Union, and in 1906, it decided to provide a building for the Union's use. This building is now known as the Holme Building, named after the first president following the organisation's reconstitution in 1911, Assistant Professor E.R. Holme; the building, although not completed until 1916, was occupied in 1912, with extensions made in 1924, 1935, 1954 and 1957.
A separate Sydney University Women's Union (SUWU) was formed in 1914. The Senate also agreed to fund a building for the Women's Union; Manning House was opened in 1917. It was at this time that the University made membership of the Unions compulsory.
Until the 1970s, the Unions were a significant meeting place for both staff and students; however, with the establishment of a staff club and the growth in size of the University population, the influence of staff decreased. The decision to amalgamate the two Unions came after the decision in 1971 to jointly fund the Wentworth Building, named after William Wentworth, one of the leading figures in the then colony instrumental in the creation of the University. Stage 1 of the building, with its upper entrance at one end of the pedestrian footbridge across City Road, was opened in 1972; Stage 2, comprising the portion of the building at the corner of Butlin Avenue and City Road, was not completed until 1989.
Manning House was extensively refurbished and extended in 2001. Currently, Union administration is located in the Holme Building, while the majority of member services are delivered in Manning House.
[edit] The Union today
The Union now owns and operates three buildings, Manning House, and the Wentworth and Holme Buildings. These buildings house the large proportion of the university's catering outlets, and provide space for game rooms, bars and function centres. One of the more prominent activities organised by the Union is the Orientation Week (or "O-week"), centering on stalls set up by clubs and societies on the lawns in front of the Main Quadrangle. The clubs and societies programme is a key part of the Union's activities, with over two hundred clubs to cater for the University's diverse student population. The Union also has an extensive art collection, and until recently, it maintained the Sir Hermann Black Gallery. To serve the students at the University's other campuses, the Union has branches at other faculties and colleges away from the main site, and has programmes specifically catered for these affiliated sites.
Today, the Union is operated as a business, with a board of directors elected by the students at the University. Consisting of 14 members, the Board is composed of:
- 11 directors elected for overlapping two year terms by members of the union, with 5 elected in even-numbered years and 6 elected in odd-numbered years;
- 2 directors appointed by the University of Sydney Senate; and
- The immediate past president, who is non-voting.
The current Board of Directors is made up of:
- Rose Khalilizadeh (President)
- Ros Stein (Vice President)
- Tom Kavanagh (Honourary Treasurer)
- Mark Tanner (Honourary Secretary)
- Danielle Tuazon
- Justin Simon
- Alice Dixon (Chair, Debates)
- Justin Hancock
- Vyvyan Nickels (Chair, Student Programs and Activities)
- Ruchir Punjabi
- Abi Shead (Chair, Affiliated Sites)
Following the passing of David Burnett in January 2008[1], Justin Simon has become a Director[2] of the Board subject to Clause 10.2(d) of the University of Sydney Union Constitution[3][4].
Voluntary student unionism (VSU) provides a challenge to the Union, as it must attempt to either derive the funds it previously received from membership from other sources, provide greater incentives for students to join it, or cut down on the services it provides.
[edit] Student media
The magazine Hermes was first published in 1886, and the Union Recorder was first published in 1921. At least in recent years, the Recorder has been a monthly publication; however, due to rationalisation in the face of VSU, it was announced in the November 2005 issue that it would become an annual publication as of 2006, with The Bull taking its place as the primary repository of student content.
For one month during each semester, USUFM broadcasts from a studio on campus on the 90.9FM frequency. The Union is issued a Temporary Community Broadcast License which allows them to broadcast at full power to most of metropolitan Sydney. The USUFM license is administered by the Sydney University Radio Group (SURG), which is funded through the Clubs and Societies programme. Like The Bull, USUFM is wholly staffed and operated by University of Sydney students. All content is provided by students and members of SURG[5]
[edit] Presidents
Past Presidents of the Union have included:
[edit] References
- USU 2004 Annual Report Summary
- Williams, Bruce. Liberal education and useful knowledge: a brief history of the University of Sydney, 1850-2000, Chancellor's Committee, University of Sydney, 2002. ISBN 1-86487-439-2
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Labor star killed in cliff accident - World - smh.com.au
- ^ USU Online - the University of Sydney Union Website
- ^ http://usuonline.com/library/controls/download.aspx?fileid=268
- ^ USU Online - the University of Sydney Union Website
- ^ About the Sydney University Radio Group
- ^ The Honourable Justice Michael Kirby AC CMG
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
|
Student unionism in Australia |
---|
Campus unions in Australia |
Adelaide | Australian National | Canberra | Central Queensland | Charles Sturt | Curtin | Deakin | Edith Cowan | Flinders | Griffith (Gold Coast) | James Cook | La Trobe | Macquarie | Melbourne | Murdoch | New England | New South Wales | Newcastle | Queensland | RMIT | Southern Cross | Swinburne | Sydney | Tasmania: Cradle Coast, Hobart, Inveresk, Newnham | UTS | Victoria | Western Australia | Western Sydney | Wollongong |
Student councils in Australia |
Adelaide | Australian Catholic | Australian National | Ballarat | Canberra | Monash: Berwick, Caulfield, Clayton, Gippsland, Parkville, Peninsula | New England | Newcastle | Notre Dame | QUT | South Australia | Southern Cross: Coffs Harbour, Lismore | Southern Queensland | Sunshine Coast | Swinburne | Sydney | UTS | Western Sydney | Wollongong |
National student organisations in Australia |
Australian Liberal Students Federation | Australian Union of Students | Australasian Union of Jewish Students | Grassroots Left | Independents | National Labor Students | National Liaison Committee | National Union of Students | Socialist Alternative | Student Unity | Australian Labor Students | National Broad Left | National Organisation of Labor Students |