Mahatma Gandhi, Indian independence movement on Oxford curriculum

Move comes after a campaign demanded decolonisation of subjects.

Update: 2017-05-28 20:35 GMT
Possible topics include the Indian independence movement and the 1960s civil rights movement, highlighting figures such as Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King.

London: The University of Oxford has introduced a new compulsory exam paper for history students to include Indian, Asian and Middle Eastern affairs as part of a wider move to make its curriculum more inclusive.

Possible topics include the Indian independence movement and the 1960s civil rights movement, highlighting figures such as Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King.

There will still be two compulsory papers on British history but from the autumn semester this year, the university’s history undergraduates will have to take a paper that covers neither British nor European topics as part of their three-year degree, The Sunday Times reported.

The move comes as universities across the country face protests as part of a wider “Why is my curriculum white?” campaign and demand that syllabus be “decolonised”.

Martin Conway, head of the faculty at the world’s leading university, said the change was being made to “bring in diversity in terms of the teaching of history” after consulting students.

Other UK universities are also revising the way they teach history in the face of student demands. At Leeds University, a module on black British history is in development and the university’s Raphael Hallett said academics wanted to “audit” the syllabus to see whether it was designed from a “western or hegemonic perspective”.

A university spokesperson said: “We are always open to academically sound suggestions for augmenting our curriculum.”

At Cambridge University, Professor Sir Richard Evans, told the newspaper that they were changing the way the British Empire was taught.    

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