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Chancellor (education)

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Leader of a university or college
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Achancellor is a leader of a college or university, usually either the executive or ceremonial head of the university or of a university campus within auniversity system.

In mostCommonwealth and former Commonwealth nations, the chancellor is usually a ceremonial non-resident head of the university. In such institutions, the chief executive of a university is the vice-chancellor, who may carry an additional title such aspresident (e.g. "president & vice-chancellor"). The chancellor may serve as chairperson of the governing body; if not, this duty is often held by a chairperson who may be known as apro-chancellor.

In many countries, the administrative and educational head of the university is known as the president,principal orrector. In the United States, the head of a university is most commonly a university president. In U.S. university systems that have more than one affiliated university or campus, the executive head of a specific campus may have the title of chancellor and report to the overall system's president, or vice versa.

Chancellor

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Australia and New Zealand

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In both Australia and New Zealand, a chancellor is the chairperson of a university's governing body; thus, as well as having ceremonial duties, the chancellor participates in the governance of the university (but not its active management). The chancellor is assisted by a deputy chancellor (known as the pro-chancellor in some universities). The chancellor and deputy chancellor are frequently drawn from the senior ranks of business or the judiciary (it is one of the few jobs considered compatible with judicial service). Some universities have a visitor who is senior to the chancellor. University disputes can be appealed from the governing board to the visitor (as is still the case in the UK), but nowadays, such appeals are generally prohibited by legislation, and the position has only ceremonial functions (unlike the chancellor and deputy chancellor, who frequently preside at functions such as graduations, the visitor rarely attends university functions). The vice-chancellor usually serves as the chief executive of the university.

Macquarie University in Sydney is a noteworthy anomaly as it once had the unique position ofEmeritus Deputy Chancellor, a post created forJohn Lincoln upon his retirement from his long-held post of deputy chancellor in 2000. The position was not merely an honorary title, as it also retained for Lincoln a place in the University Council until his death in 2011.

Bangladesh

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Chancellor is a titular position in Bangladesh always held by the incumbentPresident of Bangladesh under the Private Universities Act 1992.[1] The position in public universities is not fixed for the president under any acts or laws (since the erection of a state university in Bangladesh requires an act to be passed in itself),[2] but it has been the custom so far to name the incumbent president of the country as chancellor of all state universities thus established. The day-to-day business of the university is run by the vice chancellor. The vice chancellor has a deputy called the pro-vice-chancellor.

Canada

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See also:Category:Chancellors by university and college in Canada

Canadian universities have a titular chancellor similar to those inEngland and Wales, with day-to-day operations typically handled by aprincipal. The vice-chancellor usually carries the joint title of "president and vice-chancellor" or "rector and vice-chancellor."

Finland

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In Finland, if the university has a chancellor (Finnish:Kansleri, Swedish:Kansler), they are the leading official in the university. The duties of the chancellor are mainly to promote sciences and to look after the best interests of the university. As therector of the university (Finnish:rehtori, Swedish:rektor) remains the de facto administrative leader and chief executive official, the role of the chancellor is more of a social, political and even historical nature. However some administrative duties still belong to the chancellor's jurisdiction despite their often arguably ceremonial nature. Examples of these include the appointment of newprofessors anddocents.

The chancellor ofUniversity of Helsinki (the oldest and largest in Finland) has also the right to be present and to speak in the plenary meetings of theCouncil of State when matters regarding the university are discussed. Despite their role as the chancellor of only one university, they are often regarded as the political representative of Finland's entire university institution when they exercise their rights in the Council of State.

In thehistory of Finland the office of the chancellor dates all the way back to theSwedish Empire, and later theRussian Empire. Historically the chancellor's duty was to function as the official representative of the monarch in the autonomous university.

The number of chancellors in Finnish universities has declined over the years, and in the vast majority of Finnish universities the highest official is the rector. The remaining universities with chancellors are University of Helsinki andÅbo Akademi University.

France

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In France, chancellor (chancelier) is one of the titles of therector (recteur), a senior civil servant of theMinistry of Education serving as manager of a regional educational district (académie). In his capacity as chancellor, the rector awardsacademic degrees to the university's graduates, oversees thelegality of the universities' executive acts and channels funding from the ministry.[citation needed] The rector has no executive function in any university but remains a memberex officio of the board of every public university in his district.[citation needed]

Germany and Poland

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In Poland, the chancellor (kanclerz) is the head of many universities' administration and the leader of the non-academic staff while the rector is the academic head. The main academic bodies of the university consists of: rektor (the head of the university), prorector (deputy rektor), dziekan (the head of the faculty), prodziekan (deputy dziekan), senat (the main council of the university). In universities with presidential constitution, the university's president holds both the functions of chancellor and rector.

Similarly, in Germany the chancellor (Kanzler) is the head of the administration, and regularly is recruited not from a scholarly but from an administrative background. The chancellor is a member of the governing body of the university (Hochschulleitung), which is directed by either a rector (Rektor) or a president (Präsident), whose precise role may vary among universities. Traditionally, the chancellor had the role to represent the local king or later the government in the university and to make sure that the university is compliant with government laws and policies. After universities gained more autonomy in the 20th century, they also got more freedom in choosing the chancellor by themselves. However, still today the chancellor is not an administrator who is entirely subordinate to the president but an office holder who oversees a host of responsibilities assigned to him or her directly by higher education law. This can give the chancellor a considerable veto power in the university leadership.

Hong Kong

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In Hong Kong, theChief Executive of Hong Kong (and before 1997,Governor of Hong Kong) acts as the chancellor of all chartered universities, which includes alleight public universities andHong Kong Metropolitan University.[3] Day-to-day operation is in the hands of either a vice-chancellor (older and established institutions) or a president (in newer institutions), depending on the institution.

Post-Soviet states and Turkey

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In post-Soviet states and Turkey, the head of the university is called a "rector." Some universities in Russia and Ukraine also have figurehead "presidents."

India

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In India, almost all universities have a chancellor as their titular head whose function is largely ceremonial. The governor of the state, appointed as the union's representative of state by the president, is the honorary chancellor of all State owned universities. The de facto head of any government university is the vice-chancellor. In private non-profit universities, normally the head of the foundation who has established the university is the chancellor of the university and is the head of the university.

For private university unlike the chancellor who heads the conventional Indian 'state university', the private university is headed by a president or chairman of private organization and have other posts like vice-chancellors, deans of faculties, registrar and controller of examinations.[4]

Ireland

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In Ireland, the four universities all have a chancellor as their figurehead leader. However, the day-to-day operations of the universities are under the directorship of a president (aprovost in the case ofTrinity College Dublin). TheNational University of Ireland's constituent universities do not have a chancellor each; rather, the president of each constituent university has the title ofPro-Vice-Chancellor of the NUI. InDublin City University and theUniversity of Limerick, the chancellor is also the chairman of the university's governing authority.

Malaysia

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In Malaysia, the chancellor position is given to dignitaries such as royalty or prominent politicians by universities to represent the universities in the political arena. For example, the chancellor ofUniversity of Malaya, the oldest university in Malaysia isSultan Nazrin Shah, theSultan of Perak.

All public universities except theInternational Islamic University of Malaysia used the term chancellor. While for IIUM, the Constitutional Head which has same degree as the chancellor is used.

Nepal

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In Nepal, universities have a chancellor as ceremonial head. The de facto head of the university is the vice-chancellor. The chancellor is primarily responsible for attending the convocation programmes and accepting the resignation and appointment letter of a new vice-chancellor. Generally, the prime minister is considered the chancellor, and in his absence, the minister of education acts as the chancellor.

Pakistan

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In Pakistan, chancellor is normally the figurehead of the university, who is normally the provincial governor where that university exists.Day-to-day business of the university is run by the vice chancellor.

Philippines

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In the Philippines, theDe La Salle University designates the head of its university as the chancellor. For the University of the Philippines, the entire system is headed by a president, while the eight constituent universities under the system is each headed by a chancellor. The chancellor designates the different vice-chancellors for different areas of concern of the university: academic affairs, finance, and community affairs, among others. Some more universities likeUniversity of Santo Tomas and other colleges institutions have chancellors. Its chancellor is the incumbent Master of the Order of Preachers (Dominicans); meanwhile, the vice chancellor is the prior provincial of the Dominican Province of the Philippines. Their roles are largely ceremonial. The University of Santo Tomas is governed mainly by itsrector magnificus in overseeing its academic, financial and other affairs. The Central Seminary under the University of Santo Tomas also has an appointed Chancellor who acts as the executive secretary of the rector and the guardian of the archives of the seminary.

Other universities in the Philippines (such as state universities like Mindanao State University where each constituent campus is headed by chancellor) are mostly headed by their respective university presidents.

United Kingdom

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Lord Grenville as Chancellor of the University of Oxford; painting by William Owen
The Chancellor of the University of Oxford,Lord Patten, in procession at Encaenia, 2009
See also:List of chancellors and vice-chancellors of British universities andAncient university governance in Scotland § The Chancellor

In the United Kingdom, a university chancellor is a ceremonial position held by a prominent person; the executive head of the university is usually the vice-chancellor.[5] In Scotland, the executive head is titled the "principal and vice-chancellor".

United States

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See also:List of longest serving higher education presidents

In the United States, heads of colleges and universities are typically called "president." A multi-campusuniversity system may be headed by a chancellor who serves as systemwide chief, with presidents governing individual institutions. This is more commonly seen in university systems which were belatedly formed by grouping together already-extant colleges or universities in the 20th century, such as theState University of New York, theCity University of New York, and theCalifornia State University. In manystate university systems which began with a single flagship campus in the 18th or 19th century and gradually delegated operational authority tosatellite campuses during the 20th century, the titles are reversed. This is the case inArkansas,California,North Carolina,Illinois,Massachusetts,Missouri, andWisconsin.

Outside of university systems, presidents are the functional chief executive officers of most standalone U.S. universities. However, a few universities, such asSyracuse University and theUniversity of Pittsburgh, have a chancellor as their chief executive officer. There are occasional other uses of the title "chancellor."The College of William & Mary uses the term "chancellor" in the British sense, as a figurehead leader, but the actual executive of the school is the "president", not a "vice-chancellor." Some schools, such asLubbock Christian University, give the ceremonial title of "chancellor" to a retiring university president.The Catholic University of America is headed by apresident (formerly "rector"), with theArchbishop of Washington serving as chancellor, a ceremonial position but one which does require the archbishop to represent the university before theHoly See. This scenario, while not always exactly duplicated, is typical in other Catholic universities due to the Catholic hierarchy. In some schools run by Catholic religious orders, the rector of the community supersedes the president when the latter is a member of that religious order. In some universities, such asMassachusetts Institute of Technology, the chancellor is a high-ranking officer below the president and equal to or below the provost, who might have vice-chancellors reporting to her or him.[6]

The title "chancellor" is sometimes used inK-12 education in a sense similar tosuperintendent of schools, particularly in urban school districts. TheNew York City Schools Chancellor is the chief executive officer of theNew York City Department of Education, which manages the city's public school system (the largest in the United States). The leader of theDistrict of Columbia Public Schools system is also referred to as the chancellor.

University president

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"College president" and "President (education)" redirect here. For the head of house sometimes titled "President", seeHead of college.

University president is the title of the highest-ranking officer within theacademic administration of a university, within university systems that prefer that appellation over other variations such as chancellor orrector. The relative seniority varies between institutions.

France

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In France, the president is the elected chair of the board and chief executive officer in universities. The president is always elected by the board among the professors of the university. The president serves a four-year term which is renewable once.[7] The chancellor is a servant of theMinistry of Education who supervises regional educational districts.[citation needed] There is no hierarchical relation between the president and the chancellor.

United Kingdom

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In a number of British universities, the title of president is used alongside that of vice-chancellor for the chief executive officer, as either "president and vice-chancellor" or "vice-chancellor and president".[8][9][10] Historically, the title of president was used for the ceremonial heads of constituent institutions of theUniversity of Wales, thus the politicianNeil Kinnock was President ofCardiff University from 1998 until succeeded in 2009 by the Nobel prize winner SirMartin Evans.[11]

The private London-based liberal-arts universityRichmond, The American International University in London utilises the same system as in the United States but also with a ceremonial chancellor as figurehead.[12]

United States

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E. Gordon Gee, former president ofBrown University,Ohio State University,Vanderbilt University, andWest Virginia University

In most stand-alone universities and colleges in the United States, the chief executive officer is called the president, while the second-most senior officer is called theprovost, vice president of academic affairs, dean of faculties, or some other similar title.[13]

In the United States, the executive and ceremonial roles are not split, which means that a university president assumes an enormous burden in terms of the sheer breadth of their duties and responsibilities.[14] The president is expected to preside over all major ceremonies, including graduations and presentations of awards and honors,[15] while also reporting to the board of trustees and personally handling certain high-level executive functions: external relations (especially public relations and fundraising) and long-range planning and strategy (especially the creation and termination of university degrees, programs, and policies).[13][14] Most other decisions are delegated to their second in command, especially operational day-to-day decisions.[13] The provost often has the final say on resource allocation decisions, difficulttenure decisions, whether to initiate recruiting of star faculty from other institutions, and whether to initiate defensive measures against such recruiting of the institution's own star faculty.[13]

University presidents typically ascend to the position from academic careers (i.e., after earning tenure and becoming professors and then deans), and it is highly unusual for a university to recruit a president who lacks a strong track record in academic research or university administration.[16][17]

The average salary for college presidents in private, non-profit institutions in 2015 was $569,932, 9 percent higher than in 2014.[18]

There are two well-known problems with the American tradition of concentrating so much power and responsibility in a single person. First, American universities are notoriously bad at training faculty members and administrators to assume such a heavy burden.[14][19] Second, university presidents are increasingly vulnerable tooccupational burnout and either return to the faculty or flee academia for nonprofits or consulting.[20] The average length of an American university president's term of office dropped from 8.5 years in 2006 to 5.9 years in 2023.[20]

Vice-chancellor

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Main article:Vice-chancellor
See also:Vice-Chancellor (disambiguation)

Principal

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The principal is the chief executive and thechief academic officer of a university or college in certain parts of theCommonwealth.

A "director" is the chief executive officer of a university or other educational institution. Equivalent names in different countries arevice-chancellor (manyCommonwealth countries), chancellor (United States), principal (Scotland and Canada), anduniversity president.

United Kingdom

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See also:Ancient university governance in Scotland

In Scotland, the principal is appointed by theuniversity court or governing body of the university and will be chairman or president of the body of academics. In the case of theancient universities of Scotland, the principal is president of theacademic senate. The principal also holds the title of vice-chancellor, but their powers with regard to this position extend only to the awarding of degrees, as both the vice-chancellor and chancellor are titular posts.

Canada

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Queen's University andMcGill University in Canada have principals instead ofpresidents as a result of their Scottish origins. In addition, theRoyal Military College of Canada also has a principal.

South Africa

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Further information:List of South African university chancellors and vice-chancellors,List of Vice-Chancellors and Chancellors of the University of Pretoria,Chancellor of the University of Cape Town, andVice-Chancellor of the University of Cape Town

In South Africa, theHigher Education Act 101 of 1997 defines the principal as "the chief executive and accounting officer of a public higher education institution."[21] The definition allows for the alternative nomenclatures of vice-chancellor and a rector, and these terms are in widespread use (the termvice-chancellor is more common in English-medium universities, whilst the termrector tends to be used inAfrikaans-medium universities). The exact name in a particular university will be defined by theInstitutional Statute. The same act defines the chancellor as the titular head of an institution.

See also

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References

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  1. ^"The Private University Act, 1992". Südasien-Institut. Archived fromthe original on 17 December 2007. Retrieved6 April 2011.
  2. ^"Ministry of Education – Law/Act". Ministry of Education, Government of the People's Republic of Bangladesh. Retrieved6 April 2011.
  3. ^"Chief executive's HKU role should only be honorary, says panel".South China Morning Post. 23 February 2017. Retrieved15 September 2017.
  4. ^"Two more private universities approved for Pune".The Times of India. Retrieved3 July 2014.
  5. ^Gill Evans (17 September 2024)."What is a Chancellor for?".HEPI. Retrieved3 February 2025.
  6. ^"Chancellor MIT Organization Chart". orgchart.mit.edu. Retrieved28 July 2022.
  7. ^Code de l'éducation, art. L 712-2(in French)
  8. ^"University statutes".University of Manchester. Retrieved11 April 2023.
  9. ^"President and Vice-Chancellor".Queen's University Belfast. 19 April 2016. Retrieved11 April 2023.
  10. ^"President and Vice-Chancellor".Cardiff University. Retrieved11 April 2023.
  11. ^"Annual Review"(PDF). Cardiff University. 2009. pp. 7, 34. Retrieved11 April 2023.
  12. ^"The Executive Team".Richmond American University London. Archived fromthe original on 4 October 2022. Retrieved31 January 2024.
  13. ^abcdGoldsmith, John A.; Komlos, John; Gold, Penny Schine (2001).The Chicago Guide to Your Academic Career: A Portable Mentor for Scholars from Graduate School Through Tenure. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 257–258.ISBN 9780226301495.
  14. ^abcKirwan, William (2018)."Becoming a President". InTrachtenberg, Stephen Joel; Kauvar, Gerald B.;Gee, E. Gordon (eds.).Leading Colleges and Universities: Lessons from Higher Education Leaders. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 3–9.ISBN 9781421424934. Retrieved19 March 2023.
  15. ^Kerr, Clark (2001).The Gold and the Blue: A Personal Memoir of the University of California, 1949–1967, Volume 1. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 214.ISBN 9780520223677. Retrieved24 January 2021.
  16. ^Gordon, Larry (12 July 2013)."Janet Napolitano, Homeland Security chief, to head UC".Los Angeles Times. Retrieved25 January 2021.
  17. ^Loftin, R. Bowen (2018)."Leading a Public Flagship within a State System". InTrachtenberg, Stephen Joel; Kauvar, Gerald B.;Gee, E. Gordon (eds.).Leading Colleges and Universities: Lessons from Higher Education Leaders. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 245–252.ISBN 9781421424934. Retrieved2 December 2020.
  18. ^Smith, Kate (11 December 2017)."College Presidents Making $1 Million Rise With Tuition and Student Debt".Bloomberg News. Retrieved13 December 2017.
  19. ^June, Audrey Williams (14 April 2023)."Here Are the Parts of Their Job for Which Presidents Want More Training".The Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved5 January 2024.
  20. ^abJesse, David (14 April 2023)."Portrait of the Presidency".The Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved5 January 2024.
  21. ^"Higher Education Act 101 of 1997". 4 July 2010. Retrieved4 July 2010.
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