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Sheffield Hallam apologises to China scholar over publication ban

Curtailment of Laura Murphy鈥檚 research into alleged forced labour practices in China raises further questions over foreign government interference on UK campuses

Published on
November 3, 2025
Last updated
November 3, 2025
Sheffield Hallam University
Source: iStock/Janis Abolins

Sheffield Hallam University has apologised to a professor whose research into alleged human rights abuses was blocked from publication after political pressure from the Chinese security services.

In late 2024, a study by Laura Murphy, professor of human rights and contemporary slavery at Sheffield Hallam, into forced labour practices faced by Uyghur Muslims was refused publication by her institution after a campaign of harassment and intimidation from Beijing, the听and听听reported.

Sheffield Hallam staff working in offices in mainland China faced visits from intelligence officials over the research, while access to the university鈥檚 websites was blocked for more than two years, hampering student recruitment, it is claimed.

In an internal email from July 2024 obtained by Murphy, using a subject access request, university officials said 鈥渁ttempting to retain the business in China and publication of the research are now untenable bedfellows鈥.

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After taking a career break to work for the US government, Murphy returned to Sheffield Hallam in early 2025, and says she was told by administrators that the university was no longer permitting any research on forced labour or on China, prompting her to start legal action.听

Her solicitor, Claire Powell, of the firm Leigh Day, said that Murphy鈥檚 鈥渁cademic freedom has been repeatedly and unlawfully restricted over the past two years鈥.

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鈥淭he documents uncovered paint an extremely concerning picture of a university responding to threats from a foreign state security service by trading the academic freedom of its staff for its own commercial interests,鈥 Powell added.听

Murphy, who claimed her university failed to protect her academic freedom, has now received an apology and the institution has told her it 鈥渨ish[ed] to make clear our commitment to supporting her research and to securing and promoting freedom of speech and academic freedom within the law鈥.

鈥淭he university鈥檚 decision to not continue with Professor Laura Murphy鈥檚 research was taken based on our understanding of a complex set of circumstances at the time, including being unable to secure the necessary professional indemnity insurance,鈥 a spokesperson for the university added.

These circumstances relate to a defamation case brought by a Hong Kong garment maker which initiated a libel case against Sheffield Hallam after its name was included in a report into forced labour published in December 2023. A preliminary rule at the High Court in London found the report had been 鈥渄efamatory鈥.

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The apology comes months after new free speech laws came into effect in England in August, with the Office for Students鈥 free speech champion Arif Ahmed warning the regulator would take action if听universities bowed to pressure from foreign governments regarding contentious areas of research.

A UK government spokesperson said: 鈥淎ny attempt by a foreign state to intimidate, harass or harm individuals in the UK will not be tolerated, and the government has made this clear to Beijing after learning of this case.

鈥淭he government has robust measures in place to prevent this activity, including updated powers and offences through the National Security Act.鈥

The Chinese Embassy in London told the BBC that the university had 鈥渞eleased multiple fake reports on Xinjiang that are seriously flawed鈥.

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鈥淚t has been revealed that some authors of these reports received funding from certain US agencies,鈥 the embassy added.

Murphy told the BBC she has received funding over the course of her career from multiple US research agencies, including the US National Endowment for Humanities for work on slave narratives, the US Department of Justice for work on human trafficking in New Orleans, and more recently from USAID and the US State Department for her work on China.

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The Chinese Embassy said the allegations of 鈥渇orced labor鈥 in her reports 鈥渃annot withstand basic fact-check鈥.

jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

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