University to ask students to sign contract vowing to stay drug-free

A university is aiming to start a "revolution" to make drug-taking "socially unacceptable" - and plans to ask students to sign a contract pledging not to take illegal substances.
Struggling students will be given supportStruggling students will be given support
Struggling students will be given support

Sir Anthony Seldon, vice-chancellor of Buckingham University, has vowed to create Britain's first drug-free campus, and says it would be "insane" to allow the often-tragic consequences of drug-taking to continue.

He warned that university leaders risked "colluding in the mass consumption" of drugs on campuses by ignoring the issue.

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Writing in the Daily Mail, the former head teacher said he believed a "revolution from below" was the way forward.

Struggling students will be given supportStruggling students will be given support
Struggling students will be given support

He said: "The middle way, which we are rolling out at Buckingham, aims to make the taking of illegal drugs as socially unacceptable as cigarette-smoking now is in public.

"We aim to do this not by focusing on expulsion - this can lead to already marginalised students experiencing acute difficulties - but by a compassionate policy of making it clear that drug-taking is totally unwelcome on campus."

Struggling students will be given support, he added, but those who repeatedly flout the policy will be asked to leave the university.

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Ultimately, the university is working towards a "student-framed contract" in which people will promise not to engage in drug-taking, he said.

Earlier this year, a survey by the National Union of Students (NUS) found almost two-fifths (39%) of students were currently using drugs, while 17% had done so in the past.

The organisation argued that universities should support students rather than punish them for drug-related behaviour.

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