°ËØÔ±¬ÁÏ

Contact

Get in touch with our press office

We are here to help with any media enquiries about The °ËØÔ±¬ÁÏ's world-leading research, latest student news and corporate issues. We can also put you in touch with our academic experts to arrange interviews.

All media enquiries should be emailed to the university's press office which isÌýpress@chi.ac.uk.

Outside office hours, urgent media enquiries can be made to 07876 885 601.

The university runs a small press office and reserves the right to prioritise responses at busy times. Journalists are asked to clearly state the publication they write for (or where they will pitch the story if freelance) and their deadline.

Claire Andrews

Press and Public Engagement Manager

Rachael Page

Press Officer

Request to join our press list to receive our press releases via email.

Media experts

Find one of our expert staff to speak on their specialist areas

Browse our experts

Dr Miles Leeson

Dr Miles Leeson

Reader in English Literature

A leading expert on the work of Iris Murdoch and her circle, Miles leads the Iris Murdoch Research Centre (the only such centre in the world). He has worked with a range of media outlets including the BBC,ÌýThe Guardian,ÌýTheÌýTimes Literary SupplementÌýand many others.

Areas of expertise include:
  • Twentieth Century Women’s Writing
  • Ethics and Literature
  • Literature and Trauma

 

Tommy Lynch

Dr Tommy Lynch

Reader in Political Theology

Dr Lynch’s research is on the end of the world as a philosophical, artistic and religious idea. He has previously written on hope, pessimism and climate change for Slate. He is also interested in understanding the relationship between race and religion, particularly in a Europe which understands itself as secular. He has been a Fellow at the Centre for Apocalyptic and Post-Apocalyptic Studies (Heidelberg University) and is on the international advisory board of ‘At the End of the World’, a transdisciplinary project at Lund University.

Areas of expertise include:

  • The idea of the end of the world
  • Philosophical responses to contemporary crises such as climate change
  • Philosophies of hope
  • The intersection of race and religion in Europe

Key facts about the °ËØÔ±¬ÁÏ

What you need to know

  • We have campuses in cathedral city °ËØÔ±¬ÁÏ and by the sea in Bognor Regis.
  • Our key disciplines are in sport, education, creative and digital technologies, and engineering.
  • We’re recognised as a green university – achieving platinum tier in the Uswitch Green Universities 2023 rankings – one of only six universities to do so.
  • Our teacher training programmes are rated outstanding by Ofsted.
  • We have been awarded the highest overall rating of ‘Gold’ in theÌýTeaching Excellence FrameworkÌý(TEF) 2023.
  • We rank 1st out of 110 universities for law in the National Student Survey (NSS) 2024.
  • We are ranked 7th in the south east, according to The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2024.
  • We have been rated as a top-40 UK university for four years in a row (Guardian University Guide 2024) and are currently rated 38th.
  • We also provide a total of 1,228 jobs in °ËØÔ±¬ÁÏ and 576 jobs in the Arun area, where the Bognor Regis campus is located.
  • More than half of the University’s student population are the first in their family to attend university, while a third originate from low-income homes earning less than £25,000 a year.
  • The £50m Tech Park at Bognor Regis, which houses all our STEM courses, wasÌý in 2018.
  • Alumni include gold-winning Olympic sailor Saskia Clark and gold-winning Paralympian Emma Wiggs.

Our students

2021/22 figures

  • Total number of students 5,987
  • Number of undergraduate students 4,802
  • Number of postgraduate full-time students 1,185
  • UK students (incl. Channel Islands & Isle of Man) 96%
  • Other EU students 1%
  • Non-EU/International students 3%
  • Full time undergraduates in receipt of Disabled Students' Allowance 10%
  • First in family to attend university 47%
  • Mature students 34%

Our History

  • The °ËØÔ±¬ÁÏ can trace its origins back to 1839 and was first opened as a college for training schoolmasters called Bishop Otter College.
  • Florence Nightingale had a hand in the formation of Bishop Otter College after writing a letter of support to the government in 1876.
  • In 1873 the College became a training college for women as a result of the campaign by Louisa Hubbard to encourage the acceptance of women as teachers. Male students were not introduced until 1957.
  • °ËØÔ±¬ÁÏ played a crucial part in the D-Day landings of 1944, where one of the lecture rooms on the Bishop Otter campus became the Operations Room of RAF Tangmere, the nerve centre controlling squadrons of fighter planes involved in the D-Day landing.
  • The West Sussex Institute of Higher Education was formed in 1977 as a result of the merger between Bishop Otter College and the Bognor Regis College of Education, becoming a single institution of higher education.
  • The title '°ËØÔ±¬ÁÏ' was approved by the Privy Council on 12 October 2005.

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