The Macquarie University Students' Council (MUSC) was the organised student body of Macquarie University, trading under Macquarie University Union Ltd (MUUL). It comprised many parts with the representative council elected by undergraduate students as its main body. Later students of the private
Sydney Institute of Business and Technology (SIBT) were also included. During its history it was also representative of post-graduate students until the creation of
Macquarie University Post-graduate Representative Association. As well as the council there were clubs, societies, collectives, departments and publications that made up the whole MUSC. These clubs, societies, departments and collectives all had various degrees of autonomy from the actual council. The council itself was the governing body of the MUSC and was answerable to the student population. In its early days, its engagement reached out to a large percentage of students. The council had a number of activist collectives open to all students around its key areas of operation. The number of focus of the collectives changed over time. The council also provided consumer type services to its members, including legal aid and academic advocacy. MUSC was created to provide a voice to students at the main campus. When under the control of the far left, MUSC built alliances with non-student organisations and movements. During 1973, the MUSC worked with the Builders Labourers Federation - BLF (a union whose members now make up part of the
Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (CFMEU)) to organise one of the first 'Pink Bans'. In 1979, an
ALP-dominated MUSC successfully organised a student referendum which saw MUSC disaffiliate from the
Australian Union of Students. This was part of a national campaign against the Australian Union of Students which involved a wide range of political groupings ranging from Liberal students to the
Communist Party of Australia (Marxist-Leninist). In its later years, MUSC established a Women's Department. The Women's Department was an autonomous Department of the MUSC. A women's collective operated through the department and was open to all women students. It operated to effect change in the lives of women on campus and in their everyday lives. The Women's Department was elected separately to the MUSC Council by women students only. == End of MUSC and Merger ==