The newly-launched 2006 figures are available here
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2005 Launch
Does your university invest in arms companies?
Sixty seven universities and colleges in the UK are known to hold shares in arms companies, often without the knowledge or approval of the students, staff and beneficiaries. Our new university Clean Investment campaign aims to alert students and staff to the investment decisions which are being made on their behalf by the financial officers of their colleges and universities, giving them the tools so that they can hold them to account, and help break the links between arms companies and higher education. Check on your university here!
Top 10 known university investors in BAE Systems* |
University |
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Number of Shares |
Trinity College, Cambridge |
|
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796,738 |
Liverpool University |
|
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431,837 |
SAUL** |
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314,800 |
Manchester University |
|
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168,000 |
Exeter University |
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162,350 |
St. John's College, Oxford |
|
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121,250 |
York University |
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115,000 |
King's College, London |
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111,800 |
Southampton University |
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97,326 |
Aberystwyth, University of Wales |
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92,000 |
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To campaign for change we now need your help, and that of your fellow students and
colleagues. We have put together templates and guidelines
for expressing your dissatisfaction with the current situation and campaigning in your
university. We've also provided links that include further
information on how to draft resolutions for your student union and proof that ethical
investments are fiscally viable!
The shareholdings
Since the beginning of 2005 we have conducted extensive research into universities and
their investments in the arms trade. We have focused on
six companies,
all of which are UK based and in the top 100 arms companies worldwide. These companies are BAE
Systems - the UK's dominant arms exporting company, VT Group, Rolls Royce, Smiths Group,
Cobham and GKN.
Out of the 183 colleges and universities that we contacted, 67 confirmed, in response to
Freedom of Information Act requests, that they
hold investments in the arms trade. Where the institution holds shares directly in the
arms companies, they have provided us with the number of shares. If the shareholdings are
part of a pooled fund obtaining an exact amount is usually not possible, so we have
indicated this with a 'YES' on the lists of investors.
Although 75 universities replied indicating that they owned no shares in any of the six
companies, only a very small number of these have confirmed to us that they have an
ethical investment policy that excludes arms companies.
The current financial policy of the remaining 41 universities is still unclear.
Some of them have simply not yet responded to our enquiries regarding their current
investments, whilst four have only recently been added to our database and not yet
been contacted. Others may hold shares indirectly as part of a managed fund(s) but
we haven't yet been able to find out whether the fund(s) contain arms companies.
Full details of the results.
Press pack (208kb) and
CAAT's 'Ivy League' of university arms company investors. |
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