by Christopher Playford, Anna Zimdars, Eve Worth, Luke Graham, Joanna Merrett, Joseph Crawford, Neil Harrison and Ruth Flanagan








Some students travel far from home to attend university. But many do not, and many cannot. The rising cost of higher education means that for students from lower-income families, mature students, commuters, carers and those with strong local ties, the possibility of studying close to home can determine whether higher education is realistic at all. Local provision of higher education therefore affects what courses are available to young people.
The South West of England is already a higher education cold spot. Evidence from the University of Exeter Centre for Social Mobility suggests that the South West has the lowest rates of progression to HE among regions in England (see reports from 2022, 2023 and 2024). This issue is not new with there being relatively few HE providers and the distances between these institutions being greater.
Young people in the South West face different challenges to those growing up in areas where there are more educational opportunities. Attainment, transport, rural school resources and local labour markets all affect whether young people can access higher education and benefit from it. In the longer term, among young people growing up in coastal and rural communities, the challenge is particularly acute. Research on occupational destinations suggests that those seeking managerial or professional employment may often need to travel or move far from home. Yet moving is not equally possible for everyone with particularly those from disadvantaged backgrounds facing barriers to move for study. We believe that the possibility of social mobility should not depend on a young person’s ability to leave their region. It should include the opportunity to living decent lives in the places people call home.
This is where SHAPE subjects matter. SHAPE — Social Sciences, Humanities and the Arts for People and the Economy — include disciplines such as history, English, languages, sociology, geography, politics, anthropology, classics, theology and the arts. These subjects help students understand people, places, cultures, institutions and change. In a recent statement, the President of the British Academy emphasised the important of these subjects to many aspects of civic life, public policy, cultural understanding and democratic participation. This built on previous work which highlighted the uneven geography of access to SHAPE subjects across the UK through a series of interactive maps. Further “cold spots” in provision were identified with the South West appearing especially vulnerable.
It is reasonable to ask whether these subjects are becoming less popular over time. There has been reduced uptake and provision in some arts and humanities subjects at 16–18 (Scott et al, 2024). However, the answer to this question reflects the complexity of subject choice at the end of secondary education. Many students do not take particular SHAPE subjects at school or college because they are not available locally, particularly in rural areas where small cohorts and funding pressures make broad post-16 provision difficult to sustain (Graham, 2024). A young person may not study anthropology, politics, classics or sociology at A-level because they were never offered it. That does not mean they would not value the opportunity to study it at university.
Nor is the evidence from higher education a simple story of decline. Broad subject patterns at university level have remained more stable as shown by Higher Education Student Statistics. Social sciences, for example, continue to account for a substantial and stable share of higher education students. The risk is that reduced school provision is mistaken for lack of demand, leading universities to cut provision and thereby narrowing future choices still further.
There is thus a danger that access to these subjects in Higher Education could disappear without anyone quite intending it. A subject becomes unavailable in school. Fewer students apply for it at university. Universities interpret this as falling demand. Courses close or contract. Future students then have even fewer chances to discover the subject at all. Each individual decision may look rational. Collectively, they create a “death by a thousand cuts”.
The consequences are not evenly distributed. If a student from a highly resourced background wants to study a subject that is no longer available locally, they may be able to move. If a student has caring responsibilities, limited finances, lower prior attainment or family reasons to remain close to home, the loss of local provision may mean choosing a different subject — or not entering higher education at all.
This is why the range of provision matters, not only the total number of university places. It also matters that provision exists across a range of UCAS tariff points and geographies. Access is not meaningful if the only local options are available to those with the highest grades, or if certain subjects can only be studied by those able to move elsewhere. And our understanding of the disciplines themselves suffers if subjects such as English or History are studied only by people from certain demographics, denying us the insights that would come with having students from a broader range of backgrounds and regions.
At a time of financial pressure, universities are understandably reviewing their portfolios. But decisions about course closure and restructuring shape regional opportunity. They determine which students can access which forms of knowledge, and where.
This also means universities have agency. Regional institutions can help sustain the intellectual and civic infrastructure their regions need. In under-served areas, universities can act as anchors for SHAPE subjects: maintaining routes into social sciences, humanities and the arts; working with schools and colleges to rebuild subject pipelines; and ensuring that students can encounter disciplines they may never have had the chance to study before.
The South West needs educational pathways that enable young people to thrive where they are, and to move elsewhere if they choose. Protecting access to SHAPE subjects is part of that wider social mobility mission. If local provision erodes, we may only notice the loss when a young person asks, “Can I study this here?” .
Right now, regional universities are considering reducing the provision of SHAPE subjects that will ensure that answer is no. Choosing to cut SHAPE subjects is abandoning our role as a regional anchor. The challenging context of higher education means leadership have an opportunity to defend opportunity and ensure the answer for future generations in the South West to ‘Can I study SHAPE subjects here?” remains a resounding “yes”.
Dr Christopher Playford is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Exeter.
Prof Anna Zimdars is a Professor in the School of Education at the University of Exeter.
Dr Eve Worth is a Lecturer in History at the University of Exeter.
Dr Luke Graham is a Senior Lecturer in History at the University of Exeter
Joanna Merrett is a PhD student at the Centre for Social Mobility, University of Exeter.
Prof Joseph Crawford is a Professor of English at the University of Exeter.
Prof Neil Harrison is a Professor in the School of Education at the University of Exeter.
Ruth Flanagan is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Education at the University of Exeter.
All are members of the Centre for Social Mobility at the University of Exeter



















