Key Points
- 35 UK universities have joined a new Defence Universities Alliance (DUA) backed by a £182 million defence skills package.
- The alliance was launched on 13 July 2026 by Defence Minister Luke Pollard MP at the University of Manchester.
- The DUA is designed to strengthen defence research, build skills, and widen student pathways into careers in cyber security, robotics, AI, aerospace engineering and advanced manufacturing.
- Nineteen of the 24 Russell Group universities are in the founding membership, while five are absent: Cambridge, Imperial College London, LSE, Southampton and Leeds.
- The Ministry of Defence said almost 100 universities applied to join the initiative, which aims to connect academia, the Armed Forces and industry more closely.
- Professor Duncan Ivison of the University of Manchester said the alliance would create a more strategic approach to higher education’s contribution and open more opportunities for researchers and students.
Cambridge (Cambridge Tribune) July 14, 2026 – 19 Russell Group universities have joined a new £182 million Defence Universities Alliance, with Cambridge, Imperial College London and LSE among the notable absentees from the founding list. The alliance was launched to bring universities, the Ministry of Defence and industry into a closer working relationship around research, skills and future defence needs.
The government said the DUA forms part of its wider £182 million defence investment package and is intended to support the UK’s future defence capability. The announcement framed the initiative as a way to give students clearer routes into defence-related work while helping universities translate research into practical applications. Ministers also said the scheme is meant to strengthen the national talent pipeline at a time when defence technology is becoming more dependent on cyber, robotics and AI.
Which Russell Group universities joined?
The founding members list includes 19 Russell Group universities, according to the government’s full list of 35 institutions. The Russell Group universities included are Durham, Newcastle, Liverpool, Manchester, Sheffield, York, Loughborough, Nottingham, Birmingham, Warwick, King’s College London, Queen Mary University of London, University College London, Oxford, Bristol, Exeter, Edinburgh, Glasgow and Cardiff.
The five Russell Group universities not included in the founding membership are Cambridge, Imperial College London, the London School of Economics, the University of Southampton and the University of Leeds. The government said the founding members were chosen from almost 100 applicants, indicating that membership was competitive rather than automatic.
Why does it matter?
The alliance could reshape how universities engage with defence research and with employers linked to the sector. For students, the clearest effect is likely to be more direct exposure to defence careers and potentially more courses, placements or research opportunities connected to security technologies. For universities, it may mean deeper links with government and industry, along with a stronger role in national capability-building.
Professor Duncan Ivison, President and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Manchester, said the DUA would “deliver a more strategic approach to the contribution higher education makes” and would better align universities with government and industry. Vivienne Stern of Universities UK said almost 100 institutions applied to take part, suggesting broad sector interest in the scheme.
Full university list
The government listed the following 35 founding members: Durham University, Newcastle University, Northumbria University, Lancaster University, University of Cumbria, University of Lancashire, University of Liverpool, University of Manchester, University of Huddersfield, University of Sheffield, University of York, Loughborough University, University of Lincoln, University of Nottingham, Aston University, University of Birmingham, University of Warwick, King’s College London, Kingston University, Queen Mary University of London, University College London, University of Oxford, University of Portsmouth, University of Surrey, University of Bath, University of Bristol, University of Exeter, University of Plymouth, University of Edinburgh, University of Glasgow, University of Strathclyde, Cardiff University, Swansea University, Queen’s University Belfast and Cranfield University.
The announcement did not present the DUA as a ranking of academic quality. Instead, it positioned the alliance as a strategic network for defence-related teaching, research and workforce development. That means universities outside the founding group are not necessarily excluded from future collaboration, but they are not among the launch partners.
Background of the development
The Defence Universities Alliance was launched by the Ministry of Defence as part of a broader push to expand defence skills and research capacity across the UK. The press release said the initiative builds on earlier MOD investment in student places and sits within a wider package aimed at strengthening economic growth and national security.
The government also linked the alliance to wider defence-sector policy, including efforts to support advanced manufacturing, engineering and technology skills. In the background note, ministers said the DUA is intended to help translate university research into real-world defence outcomes while building a stronger bridge between study and employment.
Prediction for students and universities
For students, the most likely effect is increased access to defence-linked placements, research projects and graduate pathways in areas such as cyber security and AI. For universities, the alliance may raise the value of partnerships with government and industry, especially for institutions with strong engineering, computing and strategic studies provision.
The five Russell Group universities left out at launch may still seek later involvement or alternative routes into defence collaboration, especially if the alliance expands. For the sector overall, the initiative could make defence research and skills a more visible part of higher education planning over the next few years.
