UK universities are increasingly reserving PhD opportunities for ethnic minority students in a move seen as a way of听widening the talent pipeline, but some fear that those chosen via such a route will face stigma.
Several studentships have been advertised recently that are ring-fenced for or offer favourable conditions to those from under-represented backgrounds.
Supporters see it as a way of redressing deep-rooted inequalities in the doctoral system but critics say a departure from awarding posts purely on merit poses risks.
In an advert for its Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) doctoral landscape awards,听Birmingham City University听:听鈥淎t least one of six studentships each year will be awarded to a home fee status candidate from a Global Majority background鈥.
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The university said the scholarship reflected 鈥渃lear evidence of under-representation in postgraduate research 鈥 a reality recognised by UKRI [UK Research and Innovation], the Office for Students and the AHRC鈥.
Science minister Patrick Vallance echoed such comments when asked about the practice recently in the House of Lords. Pointing to听鈥渟tark鈥 figures that show only听160 of the UK鈥檚 22,885 professors听are black, he said听鈥渨e need to do things to make sure that we get opportunity right鈥. Just 1 per cent of all听UKRI studentships are ring-fenced by research organisations for widening participation, Vallance added.听
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The University of Birmingham鈥檚 AHRC doctoral landscape award听听that听鈥渁pplications are invited from home students from minoritised ethnic backgrounds鈥 with its awards 鈥渟pecifically targeted at groups currently underrepresented in the College of Arts and Law Postgraduate Research community鈥.
At the University of Sussex, two of its five AHRC doctoral landscape awards are offered in partnership with the Stuart Hall Foundation, named after the Jamaica-born cultural theorist, and are only 鈥渙pen to applicants who identify as: Black British鈥or] British People from Ethnic Minority Backgrounds鈥.
A University of East Anglia advert听听that one studentship 鈥渨ill be reserved for a candidate who meets the award criteria and has declared relevant WP [widening participation] considerations [which] may include鈥thnic minority background鈥.
The University of Stirling also offers a 鈥溾澨齮o candidates for its AHRC doctoral landscape awards if they are a 鈥渉ome student from a BAME background, have refugee status or are care-experienced鈥. 听At the interview stage, candidates鈥 proposals may be 鈥渙verweighted鈥 based on 鈥溾榳idening participation 鈥榝lags鈥欌澨齮hat reflect 鈥渦nfair structural barriers鈥.
Contacted by Times Higher Education, the institutions stressed that their efforts were guided by the Equality Act 2010, which 鈥減ermits proportionate measures where participation by a protected group or groups is disproportionately low鈥 and aims to 鈥渆nsure fair access to doctoral study鈥.
But some people have questioned the legal basis of positive discrimination, and interpretations of the Equality Act can vary.
Even if racial quotas are permissible in law they are 鈥渂lunt tools鈥澨齮hat remain problematic for other reasons, said Abhishek Saha, professor of mathematics at Queen Mary University of London.
鈥淚n addition to fundamental issues of fairness, I鈥檓 not even convinced that this is necessarily beneficial for the demographic group it is supposedly meant to benefit. Such practices send the message to selected students that they are being chosen for reasons other than merit,鈥 he said.
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Quotas are likely to be unpopular with ethnic minority staff and even the PhD students who win them, continued Saha. 鈥淭hey cast doubt on under-represented students and scholars who have earned their place on merit. Thus, such policies reinforce the very prejudices that they ostensibly oppose,鈥 he argued.
But Ifedapo Francis Awolowo, senior lecturer in financial and management accounting at Sheffield Hallam University, said quotas were a 鈥渘ecessary, time-limited response to a doctoral system that continues to reproduce inequality at the point of entry鈥.
Awolowo explained that 鈥渄ecades of evidence show that structural factors such as awarding gaps, unequal access to research opportunities, informal networks, and narrow definitions of merit systematically restrict access for black and other minoritised students鈥.
Universities running PhDs in other disciplines have introduced similar approaches, with an Economic and Social Research Council call for a听听involving the University of Oxford stating that 鈥渢wo awards are ring-fenced for British students of Black or mixed Black ethnicity鈥, while the听听scheme awards 鈥渦p to five鈥 studentships for non-white students.
The听,听听and the听听also offer听awards limited to early career researchers from black or ethnic minority backgrounds.
Awolowo, who also leads the听听for supporting BME doctoral students, said any claims that 鈥渞ing-fencing judges candidates to 鈥榙ifferent standards鈥 rests on a flawed assumption: that existing admissions and funding processes are neutral and meritocratic鈥.
鈥淚n practice, conventional indicators of excellence often reward accumulated advantage rather than doctoral potential. Ring-fenced studentships do not require lowering academic thresholds; they redirect funding to those who meet doctoral readiness criteria but have historically been filtered out by structural bias,鈥 he explained.
Awolowo conceded that there was a real risk students could face 鈥渟tigma鈥 but 鈥渢he solution is not to abandon targeted funding; it is to run it transparently, with clear criteria, unchanged progression requirements and strong developmental support so excellence is both protected and made visible鈥.
A UKRI spokesperson said it required universities 鈥渢o undertake open, merit-based and transparent recruitment of students, while ensuring their recruitment processes are inclusive and seeking to attract students from under-represented groups鈥.
鈥淓ncouraging recruitment initiatives where there is evidence of under-representation or disadvantage is an important part of ensuring our higher education institutions (HEIs) provide a fair pathway to success for everyone in the country. HEIs are responsible for ensuring their recruitment processes comply with all relevant legislation.鈥
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