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In its early years, all officers served in a voluntary capacity. The first officers elected included John Redington (President), John Kerr (Vice-president), Fionnuala Lyddy (Secretary) and Eric Duhan (Treasurer). Pat Carroll was elected in 1975 as the first full-time President. The National College of Physical Eductation (NCPE), subsequently ], had a separate students' union also founded in 1972 until its amalgamation with the University of Limerick. Its first President was Brendan Lillis. | In its early years, all officers served in a voluntary capacity. The first officers elected included John Redington (President), John Kerr (Vice-president), Fionnuala Lyddy (Secretary) and Eric Duhan (Treasurer). Pat Carroll was elected in 1975 as the first full-time President. The National College of Physical Eductation (NCPE), subsequently ], had a separate students' union also founded in 1972 until its amalgamation with the University of Limerick. Its first President was Brendan Lillis. | ||
From its inception in 1972, the union had been involved with the ] (USI). ULSU withdrew in 1991 from USI after it decided that the national union was no longer doing what it should be doing for ordinary students on the ground. ULSU has never reaffiliated to USI, although an inquorate referendum held in 2001 on the issue indicated some support among students for such a move. The votes cast in this referendum were counted and showed that just under 55 percent of students who voted were in favour of rejoining. 66 percent in favour would have been needed to pass the referendum. The referendum did not have enough votes (only 700, changed from 20 percent to 15 percent in 2006 to be deemed valid).<ref> |
From its inception in 1972, the union had been involved with the ] (USI). ULSU withdrew in 1991 from USI after it decided that the national union was no longer doing what it should be doing for ordinary students on the ground. ULSU has never reaffiliated to USI, although an inquorate referendum held in 2001 on the issue indicated some support among students for such a move. The votes cast in this referendum were counted and showed that just under 55 percent of students who voted were in favour of rejoining. 66 percent in favour would have been needed to pass the referendum. The referendum did not have enough votes (only 700, changed from 20 percent to 15 percent in 2006 to be deemed valid).<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.ulsu.ie/pdfs/ULSUConstitution.pdf |title=ULSU Constitution |access-date=2007-08-30 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927062501/http://www.ulsu.ie/pdfs/ULSUConstitution.pdf |archive-date=2007-09-27 |dead-url=yes |df= }}</ref> | ||
Additionally, the "no" campaign was essentially, "Don't bother voting", to ensure an inquorate (and therefore invalid) referendum.{{or-inline|date=February 2018}} USI Officers were also present on the campus campaigning throughout this referendum however. This may indicate that a number of those who would have voted "no" just didn't bother.{{or-inline|date=February 2018}} | Additionally, the "no" campaign was essentially, "Don't bother voting", to ensure an inquorate (and therefore invalid) referendum.{{or-inline|date=February 2018}} USI Officers were also present on the campus campaigning throughout this referendum however. This may indicate that a number of those who would have voted "no" just didn't bother.{{or-inline|date=February 2018}} |
Revision as of 05:21, 18 July 2018
The topic of this article may not meet Misplaced Pages's notability guidelines for companies and organizations. Please help to demonstrate the notability of the topic by citing reliable secondary sources that are independent of the topic and provide significant coverage of it beyond a mere trivial mention. If notability cannot be shown, the article is likely to be merged, redirected, or deleted. Find sources: "University of Limerick Students' Union" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (August 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Institution | University of Limerick |
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Location | Students' Union Building |
Established | 1972 |
Affiliations | none |
Website | University of Limerick Students' Union |
The University of Limerick Students' Union (Template:Lang-ga) is the representative body for all students at the University of Limerick, situated in Limerick, Ireland
History
The National Institute for Higher Education (NIHE) was founded in Limerick in 1972. The 113 students who started in NIHEL, that year, founded the Students' Union, which was later to become the University of Limerick Students' Union.
In its early years, all officers served in a voluntary capacity. The first officers elected included John Redington (President), John Kerr (Vice-president), Fionnuala Lyddy (Secretary) and Eric Duhan (Treasurer). Pat Carroll was elected in 1975 as the first full-time President. The National College of Physical Eductation (NCPE), subsequently Thomond College of Education, had a separate students' union also founded in 1972 until its amalgamation with the University of Limerick. Its first President was Brendan Lillis.
From its inception in 1972, the union had been involved with the Union of Students in Ireland (USI). ULSU withdrew in 1991 from USI after it decided that the national union was no longer doing what it should be doing for ordinary students on the ground. ULSU has never reaffiliated to USI, although an inquorate referendum held in 2001 on the issue indicated some support among students for such a move. The votes cast in this referendum were counted and showed that just under 55 percent of students who voted were in favour of rejoining. 66 percent in favour would have been needed to pass the referendum. The referendum did not have enough votes (only 700, changed from 20 percent to 15 percent in 2006 to be deemed valid).
Additionally, the "no" campaign was essentially, "Don't bother voting", to ensure an inquorate (and therefore invalid) referendum. USI Officers were also present on the campus campaigning throughout this referendum however. This may indicate that a number of those who would have voted "no" just didn't bother.
However it has, on occasion, supported campaigns organised by USI. Following moves by USI to welcome non-affiliates 'back into the fold', ULSU instituted (in 2006/07) a process of review of the non-affiliation. This was reacted to with great hostility by the union's main decision-making body, Class Representatives' Council, in early 2007, and so a proposed referendum never happened. However, sabbatical officers have continued to maintain relationships with counterparts in other unions. Non-affiliate unions are no longer able to attend Union Officer Seminar of USI.
ULSU is also one of the more active members of FUSU (Forum of University Students' Unions). FUSU recently welcomed Dublin Institute of Technology into the group in recognition of the Institute's size and similarity to a university. FUSU is not a competitor organisation for USI, rather it is more of a discussion forum and information exchange. This is particular useful for ULSU.
Sabbatical Officers
Three full-time sabbatical officers which work in the Student Union for the students of the University are elected on an annual basis.
The Union represents UL Students at many fora within and external to the university. Until 06/07, ULSU had only four full-time officers - the Vice-President/Communications & Campaigns Officer position was discontinued and a new Vice-President/Publicity & Publications Officer and a Vice-President/Campaigns & Services Officer took office. In the first semester of the 2008/09 academic year the title of the Vice-President/Publicity & Publications Officer was changed to Vice-President/Communications to better reflect the role. The Union employs seven other full-time and numerous part-time members of staff and owns a company, ULSU Services Ltd., which runs the 4 Students' Union Shops on campus
An Focal and other publications
The Students' Union produces a fortnightly newspaper, An Focal. The production of An Focal was formerly the responsibility of the Vice-President/Communications Officer. Following the abolition of this office in 2012, a full-time student was appointed Editor. The Editor is assisted by an editorial team of student volunteers as well as student contributors.
The Students' Union previously produced a glossy magazine, Pulse, containing arts and entertainment news and satire. Pulse ceased publication in 2011 as it was no longer financially viable, while its features were incorporated into the newly re-worked An Focal.
Student run Radio Station ULFM broadcasts from the ULSU building.
Organisation and services
The Union also provides other services to students - graphics, Nitelink bus service, education advice, welfare advice, second-hand bookshop, phone repairs etc.
The Students' Union publishes a fortnightly newspaper, An Focal, edited by a full-time student editor.
The Students' Union in UL has two main differences from some other Students' Unions:
- It has a Postgraduate Students Association - to represent all Postgraduate Students on postgraduate issues only. The Postgraduate students elect a full-time sabbatical president for the PSA.
- It runs its own clubs and societies - these are administered through the union by and for the students. As of 2018, ULSU supports 37 active clubs and 45 societies.
References
- "ULSU Constitution" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-08-30.
{{cite web}}
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ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - https://ulsu.ie/clubssocs
External links
- Official Web Site: University of Limerick Students' Union
- Clubs and Societies in the University of Limerick
Students' unions in Ireland | |
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Universities (Republic of Ireland) | |
Universities (Northern Ireland) | |
National unions |