Header Ads Widget

Oxford University drops Sackler name from buildings over opioid links

The Radcliffe Camera (Camera, meaning room in Latin) is situated in Oxford, England. Designed by James Gibbs in English Palladian Style and built in 1737-1749 The work was funded from the estate of John Radcliffe. The building serves as a reading room for the Bodleian Library. Sited to the south of the Old Bodleian, north of St. Mary's Church and between Brasenose College (west) and All Souls College (east)
A number of building at Oxford University have now been re-named (Picture: Getty Images)

The University of Oxford will remove the Sackler name from its buildings and staff posts following a review of its ties with the family.

It comes after several institutions have ended their relationships with the Sackler family in recent years over its association with the US opioid crisis.

The Sackler Library in Oxford, as well as a number of galleries and staff posts at the Ashmolean Museum in the city, will be renamed following the review.

Controversy has followed the Sacklers over their links to Purdue Pharma, which produces OxyContin, a painkiller that has been at the heart of multiple lawsuits relating to the US opioid crisis.

The university said donations received from the Sackler family and their trusts will be ‘retained by the university for their intended educational purposes’.

It added that no new donations have been received from the family or their trusts since January 2019.

The Sackler name will be removed from six university buildings, spaces and staff posts, but it will be retained on the Clarendon Arch and on the Ashmolean Museum’s donor board for ‘the purposes of historical recording’ of donations.

Tom tower at Oxford university
The changes have been announced after a university review (Picture: Getty Images/iStockphoto)

The statement on the institution’s website said: ‘Oxford University has undertaken a review of its relationship with the Sackler family and their trusts, including the way their benefactions to the University are recognised.

‘Following this review, the university has decided that the university buildings, spaces and staff positions using the Sackler name will no longer do so.’

The review outcomes were approved by the university council on Monday.

For many years, the Sackler name was synonymous with huge charitable donations made by the family to galleries and museums around the world.

The university has come under pressure in recent years to remove the Sackler name from one of its libraries, two galleries and several staff positions.

The famous Palladian style building in Radcliffe Square, Oxford, UK. It was built between 1737 and 1749, and houses one of Oxford University's libraries.
The university said donations received from the Sackler family and their trusts will be ‘retained by the university for their intended educational purposes’ (Picture: Getty Images)

In March 2022, the British Museum announced it was removing the Sackler name from ‘galleries, rooms and endowments they supported’.

The National Portrait Gallery, Tate and the Roundhouse are the institutions in the UK to have cut ties with the Sacklers in recent years.

An international response has also seen venues such as The Louvre museum in Paris and New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art distance themselves form the Sackler family.

As part of the university’s decision, the Sackler library has been renamed the Bodleian Art, Archaeology and Ancient World Library.

A statement from the University of Oxford said: ‘The review outcomes have had the full support of the Sackler family.’

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.



from News – Metro https://ift.tt/sQud3pA

Post a Comment

0 Comments