Skip to content
Education Training, Political

SA merger proposal underscores urgent need for uni transparency reform

The Australia Institute 2 mins read

Media release | Friday 13 October 2023

The shadowy decision-making process that led to a proposal to merge the two largest universities in South Australia has demonstrated an urgent need to require university councils to be more transparent and accountable to the public, according to new analysis by the Australia Institute.

The universities of Adelaide and South Australia have refused to release the business case for the proposed merger, fuelling speculation the move has been primarily motivated by attracting more revenue from overseas students rather than improving education or research outcomes.

Currently, university councils, which make decisions about hundreds of millions of dollars in public funding, are not required by law to release the minutes of their meetings, which denies  the public an opportunity to understand how they make decisions.

In a new report, ‘University councils, transparency and Adelaide University merger’, Australia Institute research shows that:

  • 80% of Australians either agree or strongly agree that the minutes of university council meetings should be published.

  • When asked what university councils should focus on, 66% of Australians said improving education for students, 17% said improving research outcomes, and only 6% said increasing university surplus.

  • In a separate, state-based poll, 86% of South Australians agree or strongly agree that the details of the business case for the merger should be made public.

“Australian taxpayers fund our universities and they are entitled to understand how decisions are made. At the moment university councils are free to make significant decisions without proper transparency or accountability,” said Dr Morgan Harrington, a researcher at the Australia Institute.

“The South Australian government has pledged nearly $445 million towards the proposed university merger, but South Australians don't even know what's really motivating the push. Many people involved in the sector believe the merger is more about attracting revenue from overseas students than improving education or research. As things stand, we don't actually know, because the decision-making process has happened behind closed doors.

“What are the universities trying to hide? If their decisions are in the best interests of students, staff and the broader public then why not be up front about them?

“University councils make massive decisions about how hundreds of millions of dollars in public money is deployed. We all deserve to understand how these decisions are made.”

The new Australia Institute report proposes reforms that would increase democratic accountability and transparency within university Councils, including:

  • Amending the acts that regulate public universities to require university councils to publish the minutes of their meetings.

  • Amending the acts that create and regulate public universities to ensure that the majority of university council members are elected by university staff and students, and are drawn from candidates with expertise in education and the public sector.

The Australia Institute is a member of the Australian Polling Council. The polling methodology, long disclosure statement and margin of error for polling questions are included in the appendix of the report.


Contact details:

Anil Lambert
0416 426 722

Georgie Moore
0477 779 928

Media

More from this category

  • Political, Sport Recreation
  • 26/07/2024
  • 14:23
La Trobe University

EXPERT ALERT – 2024 PARIS OLYMPIC GAMES

LaTrobe University has academic experts available to talk to the media on a range of topics related to the 2024 Paris Olympic Games. Dr Geoff DicksonDirector, Centre for Sport and Social Impact, Australia Contact: g.dickson@latrobe.edu.au or 0475 776 029 Expertise: Dr Dickson is a sport management academic, specialising in sport governance, sport marketing, and sport integrity. Dr Dickson can discuss the following topics: Politics and geopolitics of the Olympics Sport scandals and controversies Future of the Olympics and mega-events International Olympic Committee – image, reputation and integrity Brisbane 2032 Commercialisation, sponsorship and ambush marketing Athlete activism Medal trends analysis Performance…

  • Education Training, General News
  • 26/07/2024
  • 10:00
Australian National Maritime Museum

Australian National Maritime Museum brings the wonder of Book Week into the classroom

To celebrate Book Week (17-23 August), the Australian National Maritime Museum will be hosting a series of free online workshops designed to inspire and ignite the creativity of primary school students across Australia. This series of 5 engaging workshops include 3 sessions with some of Australia’s favourite children’s authors, Dr VanessaPirotta, Jackie French, and Jess McGeachin, and 2 sessions with the Museum’s Digital Education Project Officer leading creative writing workshops to spark the imagination and passion of young writers. Conducted via Zoom so that students across Australia can be involved, these live workshops are interactive, and students are encouraged to…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training, General News
  • 26/07/2024
  • 06:01
La Trobe University

Nexus expands into NSW, enhances educational equity

La Trobe University's commitment to advancing educational equity and tackling Australia's teaching shortage has taken a significant step forward, with the expansion of its acclaimed Nexus program into primary schools across New South Wales. Nexus, a first-of-its-kind and proven initiative, is an employment-based pathway to teaching that enables high-performing professionals to transition from other careers while gaining practical experience in school settings. Building on its success in Victoria, where 94 per cent of participants were teaching after graduating from the Nexus program, a new cohort of aspiring primary teachers will start their journey through Nexus from Term 4 in NSW…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.