Oxford University is facing escalating student and faculty pressure over its handling of sexual-misconduct allegations involving emeritus professor Bent Flyvbjerg and related governance at the Saïd Business School. Undergraduates at St Anne’s College passed formal motions demanding clarity on safeguarding and criticized the university for allowing Flyvbjerg continued campus access after his 2024 arrest, according to reporting on the case. Flyvbjerg, a senior research fellow at St Anne’s and emeritus professor at Saïd Business School, was arrested on suspicion of rape and later released without charges; police concluded a jury would be unlikely to convict and that decision is now being challenged by judicial review. Students and staff are also questioning how the Flyvbjerg matter intersected with the harassment probe that contributed to Saïd Dean Soumitra Dutta’s resignation. College officials have been asked to disclose thresholds for interim measures such as access restrictions and to explain communication lapses with students. The dispute has broadened beyond a single college: it has sparked formal union involvement and could prompt regulatory scrutiny of how UK universities manage allegations against senior academics.