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University halted Uyghur study after China demand

November 03, 2025

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The Guardian

A British university complied with a demand from Beijing to halt research about human rights abuses in China, leading to a major project being dropped, the Guardian can reveal.

- Exclusive Amy Hawkins

University halted Uyghur study after China demand

In February, Sheffield Hallam University, home to the Helena Kennedy Centre for International Justice (HKC), a leading research institution focused on human rights, ordered one of its best-known professors, Laura Murphy, to cease research on supply chains and forced labour in China. Murphy's work focuses on Uyghurs, a persecuted Muslim minority in China, being co-opted into forced labour programmes. Her research, and that of colleagues at the HKC, has been cited widely by western governments and the UN, and has helped to shape policies designed to root out goods made by forced labour from international supply chains.

The Chinese government rejects accusations of forced labour and says that Uyghur work programmes are for poverty alleviation.

In February, Murphy was told her work on China, which had been described previously by the university as "groundbreaking", had to stop.

The website for the Forced Labour Lab, Murphy's small team of researchers at the HKC, was taken down - although several of the reports remain available in other, less visible parts of the university archive.

In October, the university said it was lifting the ban on Murphy's work on China and forced labour, and apologised.

But the eight-month stoppage and the abandonment of previous research reveals the chilling effect pressure from the Chinese authorities can have on UK universities.

"My first response was confusion," Murphy said. The university told her that a combination of administrative issues meant they could no longer support her work. But further inquiries suggested the university was "explicitly trading my academic freedom for access to the Chinese student market", Murphy said, which was "really shocking". The university denies that the decision was based on commercial interests.

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