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Opinion

Autonomy of universities

30 April 2026
By Peter N Varghese AO
A man in a suit stands in front of sandstone pillars in the UQ cloisters.

UQ Chancellor Peter N Varghese AO. 

(Photo credit: The University of Queensland. )

TEQSA’s intervention in the process for selecting the next chancellor of the ANU sets a dangerous precedent and is part of a disturbing pattern of intrusions into the autonomy of universities.

Selecting the chair of a governing council should be the exclusive prerogative of that council. The regulator should have no influence on who is chosen.

This is not preciousness.  It goes to the heart of a foundational principle of Australian universities. The Australian community has every right to expect our universities to be run well. But the essence of autonomy is that you are responsible for fixing what has gone wrong and are held accountable for doing so.   

Regulatory overreach weakens public institutions. It is wrong in principle and corrosive in practice.

If universities don’t defend their autonomy, don’t expect anyone else will.

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