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University of Adelaide

The University of Adelaide (informally Adelaide University) is a public research university located in Adelaide, South Australia. Established in 1874, it is the third-oldest university in Australia. The university's main campus is located on North Terrace in the Adelaide city centre, adjacent to the Art Gallery of South Australia, the South Australian Museum, and the State Library of South Australia.

The University of Adelaide
Coat of arms of the University of Adelaide
Latin: Universitas Adelaidensis
MottoSub Cruce Lumen
Motto in English
"Light beneath the cross"
TypePublic
Established1874; 149 years ago (1874)
AccreditationTEQSA
Academic affiliations
Endowment$265.7 million (AUD)
Budget$929 million[1]
ChancellorCatherine Branson[2]
Vice-ChancellorPeter Høj[3][4]
Academic staff
1,481[5]
Administrative staff
1,920[5]
Students27,357 (2018)[5]
Undergraduates20,005 (2018)[5]
Postgraduates7,352 (2018)[5]
Location, ,
Australia

34°55'14.4"S 138°36'19.3"E
CampusUrban: North Terrace
Suburban: Waite, Thebarton, and the National Wine Centre
Rural: Roseworthy
Overseas Education Centre: Singapore
ColoursBlack, white, red, gold, and blue
         
Sporting affiliations
UniSport
Websitewww.adelaide.edu.au

The university has four campuses, three in South Australia: North Terrace campus in the city, Roseworthy campus at Roseworthy and Waite campus at Urrbrae, and one in Melbourne, Victoria. The university also operates out of other areas such as Thebarton, the National Wine Centre in the Adelaide Park Lands, and in Singapore through the Ngee Ann-Adelaide Education Centre.

The University of Adelaide is composed of three faculties, with each containing constituent schools. These include the Faculty of Sciences, Engineering and Technology (SET), the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, and the Faculty of Arts, Business, Law and Economics (ABLE). It is a member of the Group of Eight and the Association of Commonwealth Universities. The university is also a member of the Sandstone universities, which mostly consist of colonial-era universities within Australia.

The university is associated with five Nobel laureates, constituting one-third of Australia's total Nobel Laureates, and 114 Rhodes scholars. The university has generated a considerable impact on the public life of South Australia, having educated many of the state's leading businesspeople, lawyers, medical professionals and politicians. The university has been associated with many notable achievements and discoveries, such as the discovery and development of penicillin, the development of space exploration, sunscreen, the military tank, Wi-Fi, polymer banknotes and X-ray crystallography, and the study of viticulture and oenology.

History

 
The founders of the Adelaide University
(1875 engraving, Illustrated Australian News for Home Readers)
 
Mitchell Building, University of Adelaide (with man and penny farthing bicycle) & the Mortlock Library, North Terrace, Adelaide (looking West), 1879–1886

The University of Adelaide was established on 6 November 1874 after a £20,000 donation by grazier and copper miner Walter Watson Hughes, along with support and donations from Thomas Elder.[6]

The university's first chancellor was Sir Richard Hanson, and the first vice-chancellor was Augustus Short. The first degree offered was the Bachelor of Arts, and the university started teaching in March 1876. John Davidson was the first Hughes professor of English literature and mental and moral philosophy.[7]

The university has a long history of championing the rights of women in higher education. It was the second university in the English-speaking world (after the University of London, 1878) to admit women on equal terms with men (1881), although women studied alongside men from the commencement of classes in 1876 and were equally eligible for all academic prizes and honours. Its first female graduate was Edith Emily Dornwell, who was also the first person in Australia to receive the degree of Bachelor of Science (BSc., 1885). The university also graduated Australia's first female surgeon Laura Fowler (MB, 1891). Ruby Davy (B.Mus., 1907; D.Mus., 1918) was the first Australian woman to receive a doctorate in music.[8] The university was also the first to elect a woman to a university council in Australia, Helen Mayo (MBBS, 1902), in 1914.[9]

 
Exhibition Building demolished in the 1960s

The great hall of the university, Bonython Hall, was built in 1936 following a donation from the owner of The Advertiser newspaper, Sir John Langdon Bonython, who left £40,000 for a great hall for the university.[10]

21st century

On 2 July 2010, the university officially implemented its "Smoke-Free Policy".[11] This move was the culmination of an anti-smoking agenda headed by Professor Konrad Jamrozik[12] and subsequently, following Jamrozik's death, the executive dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences, Professor Justin Beilby.[11] Security have the right to eject people smoking within the university buildings and also fine people smoking in the gardens or walkways. It is the first higher education institution in South Australia to institute a smoke-free policy.[11] The North Terrace campus has been smoke-free since July 2010; it was planned that the Waite and Roseworthy campuses would be smoke-free by 2011, and the university's residential facilities have also been made smoke-free.[11]

In June 2018, the University of Adelaide and University of South Australia began discussions regarding the possibility of a merger. The proposition was described as the formation of a "super uni" by Steven Marshall and Simon Birmingham,[13][14] but the merger was called off in October 2018.[15] In 2022, the topic of a merger was raised again by the new government led by Peter Malinauskas, which proposed setting up a commission to investigate the possibility of a merger of the University of South Australia, the University of Adelaide and Flinders University. Staff's opinions were evenly divided on the idea of the commission.[16]

The idea is now officially back on the table, with both universities agreeing to work on a feasibility study. The proposed new university would be called Adelaide University and open in 2026, with the aim of becoming the biggest Australian university for domestic students.[17]

Campuses

North Terrace

 
Mitchell Building from front, 2008.

The main campus of the university is on North Terrace. It is bordered by the Art Gallery of South Australia, the State Library of South Australia, the South Australian Museum and the "City East" campus of the University of South Australia. The Adelaide University Medical and Dental Schools were located across Frome Road, behind the old Royal Adelaide Hospital (now Lot Fourteen). The hospital moved to the western end of North Terrace and so have the schools; the Medical School North and South buildings were renamed Helen Mayo North and South from 1 January 2018, in honour of Helen Mayo, a doctor at the Royal Adelaide Hospital and a graduate of the University of Adelaide.[18]

The vast majority of students and staff of the university are based at the North Terrace campus, where the majority of courses are taught and schools are based. The central administration of the university and the main library, the Barr Smith Library, are both located on this campus. While many other universities have law and business schools or satellite campuses within the central business district, the University of Adelaide is unique among Australian sandstone universities for having its main presence adjacent to the main business and shopping precinct.

Buildings

Bonython Hall, (the great hall of the university), the Mitchell Building, the Elder Hall, the Napier building and the Ligertwood building, form the North Terrace street frontage of the campus. Bonython Hall is one of the many historic and heritage listed buildings located at the North Terrace campus. Others include the Mitchell Building, Elder Hall, and the Reading Room of the Barr Smith Library.

 
Adelaide University Union Building 1930

The heritage-listed group of buildings known as the Union Buildings or Union Building Group include the Lady Symon Building, the George Murray Building, the Cloisters, Union House and the Western Annexe. The earlier Georgian-style buildings,[19] including the Cloisters, the Lady Symon Building (named after the wife of Sir Josiah Symon) and the George Murray building (named after George John Robert Murray, vice-chancellor and later chancellor of the university), were designed by the architects Woods, Bagot, Jory and Laybourne-Smith (who also designed Bonython Hall, the Mitchell Gates and Johnson Laboratory, the Barr Smith Library and the Bentham Building) in 1929 and 1937. Later additions. The award-winning redevelopments in 1971 and 1975 known as Union House, including the Union Bookshop, were designed by Dickson & Platten and Robert Dickson & Associates respectively.[20]

Masterplan (2016–)

In 2016, the university commenced work on a A$1 billion, 20-year "masterplan" for its three campuses. The masterplan envisages new facilities for all schools, and greatly enhanced campus amenities for students, with a focus on pedestrians and cyclists, providing better, safer pathways through the campus, and eliminating vehicle traffic where possible. At North Terrace, the Schulz building will be repurposed as an on-campus residential college, with accommodation, and recreational facilities including a gym.[21] This major transformation of the university's physical presence across all campuses[22] comes in conjunction with the multimillion-dollar renewal and redevelopment of the old Royal Adelaide Hospital (RAH) site on North Terrace. In September 2017, the RAH moved to the western end of North Terrace, in the $4 billion South Australian Health and Biomedical Precinct (SAHBP), at which the University of Adelaide also has a physical presence in the form of the Adelaide Health and Medical Sciences Building.[citation needed]

Waite

 
The main building at the Waite Research Institute.

The Waite campus has a strong focus on agricultural science, plant breeding and biotechnology. The School of Agriculture, Food and Wine is based on the Waite campus and the campus contains components of the School of Earth and Environmental Sciences. It is adjacent to the Urrbrae Agricultural High School.

A number of other organisations are co-located in the Waite Research Precinct, including the South Australian Research and Development Institute (SARDI) (which is part of Primary Industries and Regions SA (PIRSA), whose headquarters are also at the campus); Australian Grain Technologies; the Australian Wine Research Institute.[23] the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO); and the Australian Centre for Plant Functional Genomics (ACPFG).

It is situated in Adelaide's south-eastern foothills, in the suburb of Urrbrae on 174 hectares (430 acres). A large amount of the land was donated in 1924 by the pastoralist Peter Waite. A large amount of money was donated by Rosina and John, the widow and son of William Tennant Mortlock. These donations were initially used to establish the Peter Waite Institute of Agricultural Research (first Director A. E. V. Richardson),[24] which later became the Waite campus.

A Soil Research Centre was founded in 1929 with a donation of £10,000 from Harold Darling of J. Darling and Son, grain merchants.[25]

In 2004, Premier Mike Rann opened the multimillion-dollar Plant Genomics Centre at the Waite campus.[26] Then in 2010 Premier Rann opened The Plant Accelerator, a $30 million research facility – the largest and most advanced of its kind in the world.[27]

Malcolm Oades was the director from November 1996 to 2001.

Roseworthy

Located north of the city, the Roseworthy campus comprises 16 km2 of farmland and is a large centre for agricultural research. It was the first agricultural college in Australia, established in 1883 and the first veterinary school in SA in 2008. Other organisations linked to the campus include SARDI and the Murray TAFE.

In 1991, the college merged with the University of Adelaide and became the university's Roseworthy campus, part of the Faculty of Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences. The merger would see teaching and research in oenology and viticulture transferred to the university's Waite campus, along with the bulk of its work in plant breeding.[28] Before the degree in oenology was transferred to the Waite campus, Roseworthy produced a number of highly regarded and awarded winemakers and wine critics.[29]

From the mid-1990s, the major focus of the campus turned to dryland agriculture, natural resource management and animal production. The campus is also now home to South Australia's first veterinary science training program, which commenced in 2008. The new Veterinary Science Centre houses not only teaching facilities, including a surgical skills suite, but also a public veterinary clinic offering general practice as well as emergency and specialist veterinary services for pet animals. There are also specialised pathology laboratories in this centre for teaching, research and diagnostic work. In 2013, the veterinary science facilities were expanded with the opening of the Equine Health and Performance Centre, a state-of-the-art facility for equine surgery, sports medicine, internal medicine and reproduction.[30]

Other locations

National Wine Centre

Located in the Adelaide Park Lands at the eastern end of North Terrace, the Wine Centre offers some of the university's oenology courses. Opened in 2001, the facility also hosts public exhibitions about winemaking and its industry in South Australia.[31] It contains an interactive permanent exhibition of winemaking, introducing visitors to the technology, varieties and styles of wine. It also has a wine tasting area, giving visitors the opportunity to taste and compare wines from different areas of Australia.

The Wine Centre is situated at the eastern end of North Terrace, Adelaide in the eastern parklands and adjacent to the Adelaide Botanic Gardens. The building, designed by Cox Grieve Gillett, uses building materials to reflect items used in making wine.[32]

Thebarton

 
Stirling Street entrance to Thebarton

Thebarton is the base of the university's Office of Industry Liaison. The precinct works in conjunction with the university's commercial partners. Commercial enterprises at Thebarton include businesses involved in materials engineering, biotechnology, environmental services, information technology, industrial design, laser/optics technology, health products, engineering services, radar systems, telecommunications and petroleum services. The flames for the Sydney and Athens Olympic Games were developed at the Thebarton campus by the TEC group.[33]

Ngee Ann (Singapore)

The Ngee Ann – Adelaide Education Centre (NAAEC)[34] was the University of Adelaide's first overseas centre. It was a joint venture with the Ngee Ann Kongsi foundation,[35][36] started in 1998. In 2016, the University of Adelaide withdrew from the partnership, after about 3000 students had graduated over the 18 years of operation.[37]

In 2018 the Singapore institution was rebranded as the Ngee Ann Academy, and in 2019 partnered with the University of Adelaide as well as three British universities.[37]

Gallery

Residential colleges

The University of Adelaide, unlike most universities, did not set any land aside on its North Terrace campus for student accommodation, due mainly to an ideological opposition to the culture of live-in students, but also influenced by the small size of the original campus.[38] However, demand for residential college accommodation led to the establishment of private colleges affiliated to the university. St. Mark's College was founded by the Anglican Church (then called the Church of England) in 1925, Aquinas College in 1950 by the Catholic Church, Lincoln College in 1952 by the Methodist Church, and later St Ann's College, Kathleen Lumley College and Australian Lutheran College. All are located within close walking distance of the university, across the River Torrens in North Adelaide. In addition to providing accommodation and meals for local, interstate and international students, each college organises academic support, social activities and sporting opportunities for its members.[citation needed]

Governance

In 2021, Peter Hoj commenced his tenure as 24th Vice-Chancellor,[3] taking over from Peter Rathjen (2018–20) and Interim VC Mike Brooks (2017–18, 2020–21).

In May 2020, Rathjen commenced an indefinite leave of absence after University of Adelaide Chancellor Kevin Scarce resigned without public explanation the previous day.[39] Later in the week, the Independent Commissioner Against Corruption (ICAC) confirmed he was investigating allegations of improper conduct by the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Adelaide.[40] Rathjen, accused of engaging in "a personal relationship with a staff member",[41] was succeeded by Acting Vice-Chancellor Mike Brooks. Rathjen formally resigned in July 2020,[42] "due to ill health".[43] In August 2020, the ICAC found that Rathjen had committed "serious misconduct" by sexually harassing two University of Adelaide colleagues, had lied to the then Chancellor Kevin Scarce, and also lied to the Commissioner in his evidence with respect to an investigation of sexual misconduct with a postgraduate student when he was employed at the University of Melbourne.[44] The ICAC Commissioner Bruce Lander acknowledged there were "further issues" in the full 170-page report on the investigation which he chose not to release due to privacy concerns surrounding the victims, instead releasing an abridged 12-page version 'Statement about an Investigation: Misconduct by the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Adelaide'.[45] In determining his findings, the Commissioner relied in part on the personal blog[46] of US journalist Michael Balter who documented Rathjens prior history of sexual harassment, and was largely responsible for bringing the matter to the public's attention, and ultimately ICAC's. The ICAC Commissioner's damning findings against Rathjen have put the University of Adelaide's culture under intense scrutiny in both the local and international media.[47]

Claiming ill-health, Rathjen formally resigned in July 2020 and, despite the ICAC Commissioner's findings, received a large payout from the university.[48]

Organisation

 
Bonython Hall and Mitchell Building from North Tce (looking west).

The university is divided into three faculties, down from five in 2022. This is following a merger of the Arts faculty with the Professions faculty and the Faculty of Sciences with the Faculty of ECMS (Engineering, Computer, and Mathematical Sciences).[49] Each faculty is made up of various constituent schools:[50]

Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences

  • Adelaide Medical School
  • Adelaide Dental School
  • Adelaide Nursing School
  • School of Public Health
  • School of Psychology
  • School of Allied Health Science and Practice
  • School of Biomedicine
  • Adelaide Rural Clinical School

Faculty of Sciences, Engineering, and Technology

Faculty of Arts, Business, Law, and Economics

  • Elder Conservatorium of Music
  • School of Humanities
  • School of Education
  • School of Social Sciences
  • Adelaide Business School
  • School of Economics and Public Policy
  • Adelaide Law School.
  • The National Centre for Aboriginal Language and Music Studies (NCALMS) comprises three units:[51] Kaurna Warra Pintyanthi (KWP),[52] the Mobile Language Team (MLT),[53] and the Centre for Aboriginal Studies in Music (CASM), which is within the Elder Conservatorium, and the "only devoted university-based centre for studies in Australian Indigenous music".[54][51]

Wirltu Yarlu

The university has a long history of Indigenous education, establishing its first formal courses in the Centre for Aboriginal Studies in Music (CASM) in 1972.[citation needed] Wirltu Yarlu is a separate unit, which is "responsible for engaging with and recruiting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as well as providing support to students during their time [as students]".[55]

Lecture series

The university hosts a number of lecture series, including the Joseph Fisher Lecture in Commerce, established in 1903 following a donation by politician and newspaper proprietor Joseph Fisher of £1000 to the university "for the purpose of promoting the study of commerce". The Gavin David Young Lectures in Philosophy began in 1956, owing their existence to a bequest made by Jessie Frances Raven, in memory of her father, for "the promotion, advancement, teaching and diffusion of the study of philosophy…".[56]

The university also presents the James Crawford Biennial Lecture Series on International Law, named for James Richard Crawford SC, a graduate of the university who went on to be Dean of Law at the University of Sydney and subsequently Whewell Professor of International Law at the University of Cambridge. Crawford delivered the first lecture in 2004. The university is one of a number of institutions to have established an Edward Said Memorial Lecture.[57] The first in this series was given in 2005.

Research

 
Former Vice-Chancellor Gavin Brown (left) with wife Diane Ranck and Brendon Coventry in 2009

The University of Adelaide is one of the most research-intensive universities in Australia, securing over $180 million in research funding annually.[58] Its researchers are active in both basic and commercially oriented research across a broad range of fields including agriculture, psychology, health sciences, and engineering.[59]

Research strengths include engineering, mathematics, science, medical and health sciences, agricultural sciences, artificial intelligence, and the arts.[60]

The university is a member of Academic Consortium 21,[61] an association of 20 research intensive universities, mainly in Oceania, though with members from the US and Europe. The university held the Presidency of AC 21 for the period 2011–2013 as host the biennial AC21 International Forum in June 2012.

The Centre for Automotive Safety Research (CASR), based at the University of Adelaide, was founded in 1973 as the Road Accident Research Unit and focuses on road safety and injury control.[62]

The University of Adelaide has capitalised on opportunities to commercialise its research. The university has the highest volume of commercial research agreements of all Australian universities. It engages in extensive contract research and collaborative work in conjunction with local and international companies, as well as federal, state and local governments. This activity is managed by the university's commercial development company, Adelaide Research & Innovation Pty Ltd (ARI).[59]

Some examples of recent influences to the university's teaching and research priorities are the Defence Science and Technology Group (DSTG; previously the Defence Science and Technology Organisation, or DSTO) in Adelaide's northern suburbs to which the university provides many psychology, physics, engineering, and IT graduates; and the growth in South Australia's wine industry, which is supported by the Waite and National Wine Centre campuses producing oenology and agriculture/viticulture graduates.

In addition, the university participates in the Auto-ID Labs, a network of seven research universities in the field of networked radio-frequency identification (RFID) and emerging sensing technologies.

In August 2019, Primary Industries and Regions SA (PIRSA) and the South Australian Research and Development Institute (SARDI) entered a partnership with the university, in which scientists in diverse disciplines will be able to access PIRSA's research farms share their academic knowledge to the agricultural sector. The collaboration is anticipated to help develop SA's expertise in dryland agriculture, by encouraging multi-disciplinary research and help to bring about new export opportunities.[23]

In 2020, the university partnered with SA Health to train Covid detector dogs.[63]

Other university partners include the Royal Adelaide Hospital and the Hanson Institute.

In March 2022, the Australian Space Agency and the University of Adelaide stated that they would work together on space research.[64]

Rankings

University rankings
Adelaide University
QS World[65]109
THE World[66]88
ARWU World[67]132
US News World[68]74
CWTS Leiden World[69]185
Australian rankings
QS National[65]8
THE National[70]7
ARWU National[71]8
US News National[72]7
CWTS Leiden National[69]7
ERA National[73]8

The University of Adelaide consistently features in the top 150 international universities as ranked by the Academic Ranking of World Universities, the QS World University Rankings, the Times Higher Education World University Rankings, and the U.S. News & World Report,[74][75][76][77] situating it securely in the top 1% of ranked universities worldwide. The University of Adelaide ranked 90th in the 2022 Aggregate Ranking of Top Universities[78]

Student life

Associations

As of 1 July 2006, membership of the Adelaide University Union (AUU) has been voluntary for all students, following the passing of voluntary student unionism (VSU) legislation by the Federal Government. The AUU funds five affiliates which carry out their functions autonomously. They are the Adelaide Postgraduate Students' Association (APGSA), the Clubs Association (CA), the Roseworthy Agricultural Campus Student Union Council (RACSUC), the Student Representative Council (preceded by the now defunct Students' Association of the University of Adelaide) and the Waite Institute Students' Association (WISA).

The Adelaide University Union was responsible for organising the annual Prosh (University of Adelaide) events.

Media

The University of Adelaide has three print news publications; these are:

  • On Dit, the student magazine,[79]
  • Adelaidean, the university's newspaper,[80]
  • Lumen, the alumni magazine.[81]

The University of Adelaide Press publishes staff scholarship and works of interest about the history and activities of the university.[82] The Press is also responsible for publishing the Adelaide Law Review.

The University of Adelaide founded Australia's first community radio station, Radio Adelaide, in 1972.[83]

Opportunities to participate in theatre productions are available through the University of Adelaide Theatre Guild and the Law School Revue.

Sports

Most university sport is organised by the Adelaide University Sports Association (AUSA). The Sports Association was founded in 1896 by the Adelaide University Boat, Tennis and Lacrosse Clubs. The Association disaffiliated from the Adelaide University Union (AUU) on 1 January 2010 and is currently directly affiliated to the University of Adelaide. The AUSA supports 37 sporting clubs which provide a diverse range of sporting opportunities to students of the University of Adelaide (AU). The AUSA is a major stakeholder in the AU North Terrace Campus based Sports Hub fitness centre and the North Adelaide-based university playing fields.

Venues

UniBar

The old UniBar was closed in 2018, with a new one opened in a new venue on the ground floor of Union House, in the former Mayo Cafe.[84][85]

College Green

On 4 November 2020, a new venue known as the College Green,[86] stretching from the Cloisters across the lawns down to Victoria Drive, next to the Torrens River.[87] From opening night until New Year's Eve 2020/21, live bands, DJs, free open-air cinema, the South Australian Music Awards and Christmas markets were on the schedule.[88] The move was partly in response to the impact of social distancing restrictions owing to the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia, which hit many live music venues.[89]

Little Theatre

The Little Theatre is located in The Cloisters. It has seating for 120 people,[90] and is used for dramatic performances by the University of Adelaide Theatre Guild[91] as well as independent theatre companies, such as Rob Croser's Independent Theatre.[92]

Scott Theatre

The Scott Theatre, as the largest lecture theatre on the North Terrace campus, is frequently hired out for performances of various kinds,[93] such as for Adelaide Fringe events.[94]

Notable people

 
Robin Warren, pathologist and Nobel Laureate, an alumnus

The history of the University of Adelaide includes a large number of distinguished alumni and staff, including domestic and international heads of state; Nobel laureates; business and political leaders; pioneers in science, mathematics, and medicine; media personalities; accomplished musical, visual, performance, and written artists; and sportspeople, including multiple Olympic medallists.

Distinguished alumni include 16 chancellors, 20 vice-chancellors, 114 Rhodes Scholars,[95][96] 5 Nobel laureates (one of whom was once the youngest laureate ever, Lawrence Bragg, co-recipient, with his father William Henry Bragg for physics in 1915, at 25 years of age[97]), and one Prime Minister (Julia Gillard, the first female Prime Minister of Australia) have all graduated or attended the University of Adelaide.[98][99][100][59]

Robin Warren, who alongside Barry Marshall, discovered that peptic ulcers were largely caused by the infection Helicobacter pylori, graduated from the university in the 1950s. Warren and Marshall won the Nobel Prize for their discovery in 2005.

Other Nobel prizewinners are Howard Florey (pharmacologist and pathologist who shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1945 with Sir Ernst Chain and Sir Alexander Fleming for his role in the development of penicillin); and J.M. Coetzee (novelist and linguist, recipient of the 2003 Nobel Prize in Literature),

Other notable graduates and professors include Leo Blair (the father of British Prime Minister Tony Blair; law lecturer at the University of Adelaide while Tony was a child); Edward Charles Stirling (physiologist, politician and advocate for women's suffrage), Tim Flannery (Australian of the Year), Margaret Reid (first female president of the Australian Senate), Janine Haines (first female federal parliamentary leader of an Australian political party), Margaret White (first female judge of the Supreme Court of Queensland), Roma Mitchell (first female Queen's Counsel in Australia (1962), Justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia and the first female superior court judge in the British Commonwealth (1965) and first female state Governor), and Joni Madraiwiwi, Vice-President of the Republic of Fiji and Chief Justice of the Republic of Nauru.[101][102]

See also

References

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External links

  • The University of Adelaide website

Coordinates: 34°55′09″S 138°36′15″E / 34.919159°S 138.604140°E / -34.919159; 138.604140 (University of Adelaide)

university, adelaide, informally, adelaide, university, public, research, university, located, adelaide, south, australia, established, 1874, third, oldest, university, australia, university, main, campus, located, north, terrace, adelaide, city, centre, adjac. The University of Adelaide informally Adelaide University is a public research university located in Adelaide South Australia Established in 1874 it is the third oldest university in Australia The university s main campus is located on North Terrace in the Adelaide city centre adjacent to the Art Gallery of South Australia the South Australian Museum and the State Library of South Australia The University of AdelaideCoat of arms of the University of AdelaideLatin Universitas AdelaidensisMottoSub Cruce LumenMotto in English Light beneath the cross TypePublicEstablished1874 149 years ago 1874 AccreditationTEQSAAcademic affiliationsGo8ACUEndowment 265 7 million AUD Budget 929 million 1 ChancellorCatherine Branson 2 Vice ChancellorPeter Hoj 3 4 Academic staff1 481 5 Administrative staff1 920 5 Students27 357 2018 5 Undergraduates20 005 2018 5 Postgraduates7 352 2018 5 LocationAdelaide South Australia Australia34 55 14 4 S 138 36 19 3 ECampusUrban North Terrace Suburban Waite Thebarton and the National Wine Centre Rural RoseworthyOverseas Education Centre SingaporeColoursBlack white red gold and blue Sporting affiliationsUniSportWebsitewww adelaide edu auThe university has four campuses three in South Australia North Terrace campus in the city Roseworthy campus at Roseworthy and Waite campus at Urrbrae and one in Melbourne Victoria The university also operates out of other areas such as Thebarton the National Wine Centre in the Adelaide Park Lands and in Singapore through the Ngee Ann Adelaide Education Centre The University of Adelaide is composed of three faculties with each containing constituent schools These include the Faculty of Sciences Engineering and Technology SET the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences and the Faculty of Arts Business Law and Economics ABLE It is a member of the Group of Eight and the Association of Commonwealth Universities The university is also a member of the Sandstone universities which mostly consist of colonial era universities within Australia The university is associated with five Nobel laureates constituting one third of Australia s total Nobel Laureates and 114 Rhodes scholars The university has generated a considerable impact on the public life of South Australia having educated many of the state s leading businesspeople lawyers medical professionals and politicians The university has been associated with many notable achievements and discoveries such as the discovery and development of penicillin the development of space exploration sunscreen the military tank Wi Fi polymer banknotes and X ray crystallography and the study of viticulture and oenology Contents 1 History 1 1 21st century 2 Campuses 2 1 North Terrace 2 1 1 Buildings 2 1 2 Masterplan 2016 2 2 Waite 2 3 Roseworthy 2 4 Other locations 2 4 1 National Wine Centre 2 4 2 Thebarton 2 4 3 Ngee Ann Singapore 2 5 Gallery 3 Residential colleges 4 Governance 5 Organisation 5 1 Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences 5 2 Faculty of Sciences Engineering and Technology 5 3 Faculty of Arts Business Law and Economics 5 4 Wirltu Yarlu 6 Lecture series 7 Research 8 Rankings 9 Student life 9 1 Associations 9 2 Media 9 3 Sports 10 Venues 10 1 UniBar 10 2 College Green 10 3 Little Theatre 10 4 Scott Theatre 11 Notable people 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksHistory Edit The founders of the Adelaide University 1875 engraving Illustrated Australian News for Home Readers Mitchell Building University of Adelaide with man and penny farthing bicycle amp the Mortlock Library North Terrace Adelaide looking West 1879 1886 The University of Adelaide was established on 6 November 1874 after a 20 000 donation by grazier and copper miner Walter Watson Hughes along with support and donations from Thomas Elder 6 The university s first chancellor was Sir Richard Hanson and the first vice chancellor was Augustus Short The first degree offered was the Bachelor of Arts and the university started teaching in March 1876 John Davidson was the first Hughes professor of English literature and mental and moral philosophy 7 The university has a long history of championing the rights of women in higher education It was the second university in the English speaking world after the University of London 1878 to admit women on equal terms with men 1881 although women studied alongside men from the commencement of classes in 1876 and were equally eligible for all academic prizes and honours Its first female graduate was Edith Emily Dornwell who was also the first person in Australia to receive the degree of Bachelor of Science BSc 1885 The university also graduated Australia s first female surgeon Laura Fowler MB 1891 Ruby Davy B Mus 1907 D Mus 1918 was the first Australian woman to receive a doctorate in music 8 The university was also the first to elect a woman to a university council in Australia Helen Mayo MBBS 1902 in 1914 9 Exhibition Building demolished in the 1960s The great hall of the university Bonython Hall was built in 1936 following a donation from the owner of The Advertiser newspaper Sir John Langdon Bonython who left 40 000 for a great hall for the university 10 21st century Edit On 2 July 2010 the university officially implemented its Smoke Free Policy 11 This move was the culmination of an anti smoking agenda headed by Professor Konrad Jamrozik 12 and subsequently following Jamrozik s death the executive dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences Professor Justin Beilby 11 Security have the right to eject people smoking within the university buildings and also fine people smoking in the gardens or walkways It is the first higher education institution in South Australia to institute a smoke free policy 11 The North Terrace campus has been smoke free since July 2010 it was planned that the Waite and Roseworthy campuses would be smoke free by 2011 and the university s residential facilities have also been made smoke free 11 In June 2018 the University of Adelaide and University of South Australia began discussions regarding the possibility of a merger The proposition was described as the formation of a super uni by Steven Marshall and Simon Birmingham 13 14 but the merger was called off in October 2018 15 In 2022 the topic of a merger was raised again by the new government led by Peter Malinauskas which proposed setting up a commission to investigate the possibility of a merger of the University of South Australia the University of Adelaide and Flinders University Staff s opinions were evenly divided on the idea of the commission 16 The idea is now officially back on the table with both universities agreeing to work on a feasibility study The proposed new university would be called Adelaide University and open in 2026 with the aim of becoming the biggest Australian university for domestic students 17 Campuses EditNorth Terrace Edit Mitchell Building from front 2008 The main campus of the university is on North Terrace It is bordered by the Art Gallery of South Australia the State Library of South Australia the South Australian Museum and the City East campus of the University of South Australia The Adelaide University Medical and Dental Schools were located across Frome Road behind the old Royal Adelaide Hospital now Lot Fourteen The hospital moved to the western end of North Terrace and so have the schools the Medical School North and South buildings were renamed Helen Mayo North and South from 1 January 2018 in honour of Helen Mayo a doctor at the Royal Adelaide Hospital and a graduate of the University of Adelaide 18 The vast majority of students and staff of the university are based at the North Terrace campus where the majority of courses are taught and schools are based The central administration of the university and the main library the Barr Smith Library are both located on this campus While many other universities have law and business schools or satellite campuses within the central business district the University of Adelaide is unique among Australian sandstone universities for having its main presence adjacent to the main business and shopping precinct Buildings Edit Bonython Hall the great hall of the university the Mitchell Building the Elder Hall the Napier building and the Ligertwood building form the North Terrace street frontage of the campus Bonython Hall is one of the many historic and heritage listed buildings located at the North Terrace campus Others include the Mitchell Building Elder Hall and the Reading Room of the Barr Smith Library Adelaide University Union Building 1930 The heritage listed group of buildings known as the Union Buildings or Union Building Group include the Lady Symon Building the George Murray Building the Cloisters Union House and the Western Annexe The earlier Georgian style buildings 19 including the Cloisters the Lady Symon Building named after the wife of Sir Josiah Symon and the George Murray building named after George John Robert Murray vice chancellor and later chancellor of the university were designed by the architects Woods Bagot Jory and Laybourne Smith who also designed Bonython Hall the Mitchell Gates and Johnson Laboratory the Barr Smith Library and the Bentham Building in 1929 and 1937 Later additions The award winning redevelopments in 1971 and 1975 known as Union House including the Union Bookshop were designed by Dickson amp Platten and Robert Dickson amp Associates respectively 20 Masterplan 2016 Edit In 2016 the university commenced work on a A 1 billion 20 year masterplan for its three campuses The masterplan envisages new facilities for all schools and greatly enhanced campus amenities for students with a focus on pedestrians and cyclists providing better safer pathways through the campus and eliminating vehicle traffic where possible At North Terrace the Schulz building will be repurposed as an on campus residential college with accommodation and recreational facilities including a gym 21 This major transformation of the university s physical presence across all campuses 22 comes in conjunction with the multimillion dollar renewal and redevelopment of the old Royal Adelaide Hospital RAH site on North Terrace In September 2017 the RAH moved to the western end of North Terrace in the 4 billion South Australian Health and Biomedical Precinct SAHBP at which the University of Adelaide also has a physical presence in the form of the Adelaide Health and Medical Sciences Building citation needed Waite Edit The main building at the Waite Research Institute The Waite campus has a strong focus on agricultural science plant breeding and biotechnology The School of Agriculture Food and Wine is based on the Waite campus and the campus contains components of the School of Earth and Environmental Sciences It is adjacent to the Urrbrae Agricultural High School A number of other organisations are co located in the Waite Research Precinct including the South Australian Research and Development Institute SARDI which is part of Primary Industries and Regions SA PIRSA whose headquarters are also at the campus Australian Grain Technologies the Australian Wine Research Institute 23 the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation CSIRO and the Australian Centre for Plant Functional Genomics ACPFG It is situated in Adelaide s south eastern foothills in the suburb of Urrbrae on 174 hectares 430 acres A large amount of the land was donated in 1924 by the pastoralist Peter Waite A large amount of money was donated by Rosina and John the widow and son of William Tennant Mortlock These donations were initially used to establish the Peter Waite Institute of Agricultural Research first Director A E V Richardson 24 which later became the Waite campus A Soil Research Centre was founded in 1929 with a donation of 10 000 from Harold Darling of J Darling and Son grain merchants 25 In 2004 Premier Mike Rann opened the multimillion dollar Plant Genomics Centre at the Waite campus 26 Then in 2010 Premier Rann opened The Plant Accelerator a 30 million research facility the largest and most advanced of its kind in the world 27 Malcolm Oades was the director from November 1996 to 2001 Roseworthy Edit Main article Roseworthy College Located north of the city the Roseworthy campus comprises 16 km2 of farmland and is a large centre for agricultural research It was the first agricultural college in Australia established in 1883 and the first veterinary school in SA in 2008 Other organisations linked to the campus include SARDI and the Murray TAFE In 1991 the college merged with the University of Adelaide and became the university s Roseworthy campus part of the Faculty of Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences The merger would see teaching and research in oenology and viticulture transferred to the university s Waite campus along with the bulk of its work in plant breeding 28 Before the degree in oenology was transferred to the Waite campus Roseworthy produced a number of highly regarded and awarded winemakers and wine critics 29 From the mid 1990s the major focus of the campus turned to dryland agriculture natural resource management and animal production The campus is also now home to South Australia s first veterinary science training program which commenced in 2008 The new Veterinary Science Centre houses not only teaching facilities including a surgical skills suite but also a public veterinary clinic offering general practice as well as emergency and specialist veterinary services for pet animals There are also specialised pathology laboratories in this centre for teaching research and diagnostic work In 2013 the veterinary science facilities were expanded with the opening of the Equine Health and Performance Centre a state of the art facility for equine surgery sports medicine internal medicine and reproduction 30 Other locations Edit National Wine Centre Edit Main article National Wine Centre of Australia Located in the Adelaide Park Lands at the eastern end of North Terrace the Wine Centre offers some of the university s oenology courses Opened in 2001 the facility also hosts public exhibitions about winemaking and its industry in South Australia 31 It contains an interactive permanent exhibition of winemaking introducing visitors to the technology varieties and styles of wine It also has a wine tasting area giving visitors the opportunity to taste and compare wines from different areas of Australia The Wine Centre is situated at the eastern end of North Terrace Adelaide in the eastern parklands and adjacent to the Adelaide Botanic Gardens The building designed by Cox Grieve Gillett uses building materials to reflect items used in making wine 32 Thebarton Edit Stirling Street entrance to Thebarton Thebarton is the base of the university s Office of Industry Liaison The precinct works in conjunction with the university s commercial partners Commercial enterprises at Thebarton include businesses involved in materials engineering biotechnology environmental services information technology industrial design laser optics technology health products engineering services radar systems telecommunications and petroleum services The flames for the Sydney and Athens Olympic Games were developed at the Thebarton campus by the TEC group 33 Ngee Ann Singapore Edit The Ngee Ann Adelaide Education Centre NAAEC 34 was the University of Adelaide s first overseas centre It was a joint venture with the Ngee Ann Kongsi foundation 35 36 started in 1998 In 2016 the University of Adelaide withdrew from the partnership after about 3000 students had graduated over the 18 years of operation 37 In 2018 the Singapore institution was rebranded as the Ngee Ann Academy and in 2019 partnered with the University of Adelaide as well as three British universities 37 Gallery Edit View of eastern side of the Mitchell Building from North Terrace 2007 Bonython Hall amp the Ligertwood Building viewed from North Terrace Bust of Sir Douglas Mawson amp the Elder Conservatorium of Music viewed from North Terrace Bonython Hall amp the Elder Conservatorium of Music viewed from North Terrace Bonython Hall amp the Elder Conservatorium of Music viewed from the north Bonython Hall amp the Napier Building viewed from the north The Cloisters The Cloisters and the Student Union Building The Barr Smith Library with the Napier building visible in the background Barr Smith Lawns The old Adelaide Teachers College buildings now part of the university University of Adelaide site map 1926 Statue of foundation philanthropist Sir Walter Watson Hughes facing North Tce Residential colleges EditThe University of Adelaide unlike most universities did not set any land aside on its North Terrace campus for student accommodation due mainly to an ideological opposition to the culture of live in students but also influenced by the small size of the original campus 38 However demand for residential college accommodation led to the establishment of private colleges affiliated to the university St Mark s College was founded by the Anglican Church then called the Church of England in 1925 Aquinas College in 1950 by the Catholic Church Lincoln College in 1952 by the Methodist Church and later St Ann s College Kathleen Lumley College and Australian Lutheran College All are located within close walking distance of the university across the River Torrens in North Adelaide In addition to providing accommodation and meals for local interstate and international students each college organises academic support social activities and sporting opportunities for its members citation needed Governance EditIn 2021 Peter Hoj commenced his tenure as 24th Vice Chancellor 3 taking over from Peter Rathjen 2018 20 and Interim VC Mike Brooks 2017 18 2020 21 In May 2020 Rathjen commenced an indefinite leave of absence after University of Adelaide Chancellor Kevin Scarce resigned without public explanation the previous day 39 Later in the week the Independent Commissioner Against Corruption ICAC confirmed he was investigating allegations of improper conduct by the Vice Chancellor of the University of Adelaide 40 Rathjen accused of engaging in a personal relationship with a staff member 41 was succeeded by Acting Vice Chancellor Mike Brooks Rathjen formally resigned in July 2020 42 due to ill health 43 In August 2020 the ICAC found that Rathjen had committed serious misconduct by sexually harassing two University of Adelaide colleagues had lied to the then Chancellor Kevin Scarce and also lied to the Commissioner in his evidence with respect to an investigation of sexual misconduct with a postgraduate student when he was employed at the University of Melbourne 44 The ICAC Commissioner Bruce Lander acknowledged there were further issues in the full 170 page report on the investigation which he chose not to release due to privacy concerns surrounding the victims instead releasing an abridged 12 page version Statement about an Investigation Misconduct by the Vice Chancellor of the University of Adelaide 45 In determining his findings the Commissioner relied in part on the personal blog 46 of US journalist Michael Balter who documented Rathjens prior history of sexual harassment and was largely responsible for bringing the matter to the public s attention and ultimately ICAC s The ICAC Commissioner s damning findings against Rathjen have put the University of Adelaide s culture under intense scrutiny in both the local and international media 47 Claiming ill health Rathjen formally resigned in July 2020 and despite the ICAC Commissioner s findings received a large payout from the university 48 Organisation Edit Bonython Hall and Mitchell Building from North Tce looking west The university is divided into three faculties down from five in 2022 This is following a merger of the Arts faculty with the Professions faculty and the Faculty of Sciences with the Faculty of ECMS Engineering Computer and Mathematical Sciences 49 Each faculty is made up of various constituent schools 50 Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences Edit Adelaide Medical School Adelaide Dental School Adelaide Nursing School School of Public Health School of Psychology School of Allied Health Science and Practice School of Biomedicine Adelaide Rural Clinical SchoolFaculty of Sciences Engineering and Technology Edit School of Agriculture Food and Wine School of Physical Sciences School of Biological Sciences School of Animal and Veterinary Sciences Australian School of Petroleum and Energy Resources School of Chemical Engineering and Advanced Materials School of Civil Environmental amp Mining Engineering School of Computer Science School of Electrical amp Electronic Engineering School of Mathematical Sciences School of Mechanical Engineering School of Architecture and Built EnvironmentFaculty of Arts Business Law and Economics Edit Elder Conservatorium of Music School of Humanities School of Education School of Social Sciences Adelaide Business School School of Economics and Public Policy Adelaide Law School The National Centre for Aboriginal Language and Music Studies NCALMS comprises three units 51 Kaurna Warra Pintyanthi KWP 52 the Mobile Language Team MLT 53 and the Centre for Aboriginal Studies in Music CASM which is within the Elder Conservatorium and the only devoted university based centre for studies in Australian Indigenous music 54 51 Wirltu Yarlu Edit The university has a long history of Indigenous education establishing its first formal courses in the Centre for Aboriginal Studies in Music CASM in 1972 citation needed Wirltu Yarlu is a separate unit which is responsible for engaging with and recruiting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as well as providing support to students during their time as students 55 Lecture series EditThe university hosts a number of lecture series including the Joseph Fisher Lecture in Commerce established in 1903 following a donation by politician and newspaper proprietor Joseph Fisher of 1000 to the university for the purpose of promoting the study of commerce The Gavin David Young Lectures in Philosophy began in 1956 owing their existence to a bequest made by Jessie Frances Raven in memory of her father for the promotion advancement teaching and diffusion of the study of philosophy 56 The university also presents the James Crawford Biennial Lecture Series on International Law named for James Richard Crawford SC a graduate of the university who went on to be Dean of Law at the University of Sydney and subsequently Whewell Professor of International Law at the University of Cambridge Crawford delivered the first lecture in 2004 The university is one of a number of institutions to have established an Edward Said Memorial Lecture 57 The first in this series was given in 2005 Research Edit Former Vice Chancellor Gavin Brown left with wife Diane Ranck and Brendon Coventry in 2009 The University of Adelaide is one of the most research intensive universities in Australia securing over 180 million in research funding annually 58 Its researchers are active in both basic and commercially oriented research across a broad range of fields including agriculture psychology health sciences and engineering 59 Research strengths include engineering mathematics science medical and health sciences agricultural sciences artificial intelligence and the arts 60 The university is a member of Academic Consortium 21 61 an association of 20 research intensive universities mainly in Oceania though with members from the US and Europe The university held the Presidency of AC 21 for the period 2011 2013 as host the biennial AC21 International Forum in June 2012 The Centre for Automotive Safety Research CASR based at the University of Adelaide was founded in 1973 as the Road Accident Research Unit and focuses on road safety and injury control 62 The University of Adelaide has capitalised on opportunities to commercialise its research The university has the highest volume of commercial research agreements of all Australian universities It engages in extensive contract research and collaborative work in conjunction with local and international companies as well as federal state and local governments This activity is managed by the university s commercial development company Adelaide Research amp Innovation Pty Ltd ARI 59 Some examples of recent influences to the university s teaching and research priorities are the Defence Science and Technology Group DSTG previously the Defence Science and Technology Organisation or DSTO in Adelaide s northern suburbs to which the university provides many psychology physics engineering and IT graduates and the growth in South Australia s wine industry which is supported by the Waite and National Wine Centre campuses producing oenology and agriculture viticulture graduates In addition the university participates in the Auto ID Labs a network of seven research universities in the field of networked radio frequency identification RFID and emerging sensing technologies In August 2019 Primary Industries and Regions SA PIRSA and the South Australian Research and Development Institute SARDI entered a partnership with the university in which scientists in diverse disciplines will be able to access PIRSA s research farms share their academic knowledge to the agricultural sector The collaboration is anticipated to help develop SA s expertise in dryland agriculture by encouraging multi disciplinary research and help to bring about new export opportunities 23 In 2020 the university partnered with SA Health to train Covid detector dogs 63 Other university partners include the Royal Adelaide Hospital and the Hanson Institute In March 2022 the Australian Space Agency and the University of Adelaide stated that they would work together on space research 64 Rankings EditUniversity rankingsAdelaide UniversityQS World 65 109THE World 66 88ARWU World 67 132US News World 68 74CWTS Leiden World 69 185Australian rankingsQS National 65 8THE National 70 7ARWU National 71 8US News National 72 7CWTS Leiden National 69 7ERA National 73 8The University of Adelaide consistently features in the top 150 international universities as ranked by the Academic Ranking of World Universities the QS World University Rankings the Times Higher Education World University Rankings and the U S News amp World Report 74 75 76 77 situating it securely in the top 1 of ranked universities worldwide The University of Adelaide ranked 90th in the 2022 Aggregate Ranking of Top Universities 78 Student life EditAssociations Edit Main article Adelaide University Union As of 1 July 2006 membership of the Adelaide University Union AUU has been voluntary for all students following the passing of voluntary student unionism VSU legislation by the Federal Government The AUU funds five affiliates which carry out their functions autonomously They are the Adelaide Postgraduate Students Association APGSA the Clubs Association CA the Roseworthy Agricultural Campus Student Union Council RACSUC the Student Representative Council preceded by the now defunct Students Association of the University of Adelaide and the Waite Institute Students Association WISA The Adelaide University Union was responsible for organising the annual Prosh University of Adelaide events Media Edit The University of Adelaide has three print news publications these are On Dit the student magazine 79 Adelaidean the university s newspaper 80 Lumen the alumni magazine 81 The University of Adelaide Press publishes staff scholarship and works of interest about the history and activities of the university 82 The Press is also responsible for publishing the Adelaide Law Review The University of Adelaide founded Australia s first community radio station Radio Adelaide in 1972 83 Opportunities to participate in theatre productions are available through the University of Adelaide Theatre Guild and the Law School Revue Sports Edit Main article Sport at the University of Adelaide Most university sport is organised by the Adelaide University Sports Association AUSA The Sports Association was founded in 1896 by the Adelaide University Boat Tennis and Lacrosse Clubs The Association disaffiliated from the Adelaide University Union AUU on 1 January 2010 and is currently directly affiliated to the University of Adelaide The AUSA supports 37 sporting clubs which provide a diverse range of sporting opportunities to students of the University of Adelaide AU The AUSA is a major stakeholder in the AU North Terrace Campus based Sports Hub fitness centre and the North Adelaide based university playing fields Venues EditUniBar Edit The old UniBar was closed in 2018 with a new one opened in a new venue on the ground floor of Union House in the former Mayo Cafe 84 85 College Green Edit On 4 November 2020 a new venue known as the College Green 86 stretching from the Cloisters across the lawns down to Victoria Drive next to the Torrens River 87 From opening night until New Year s Eve 2020 21 live bands DJs free open air cinema the South Australian Music Awards and Christmas markets were on the schedule 88 The move was partly in response to the impact of social distancing restrictions owing to the COVID 19 pandemic in Australia which hit many live music venues 89 Little Theatre Edit The Little Theatre is located in The Cloisters It has seating for 120 people 90 and is used for dramatic performances by the University of Adelaide Theatre Guild 91 as well as independent theatre companies such as Rob Croser s Independent Theatre 92 Scott Theatre Edit The Scott Theatre as the largest lecture theatre on the North Terrace campus is frequently hired out for performances of various kinds 93 such as for Adelaide Fringe events 94 Notable people EditMain article List of University of Adelaide people Robin Warren pathologist and Nobel Laureate an alumnus The history of the University of Adelaide includes a large number of distinguished alumni and staff including domestic and international heads of state Nobel laureates business and political leaders pioneers in science mathematics and medicine media personalities accomplished musical visual performance and written artists and sportspeople including multiple Olympic medallists Distinguished alumni include 16 chancellors 20 vice chancellors 114 Rhodes Scholars 95 96 5 Nobel laureates one of whom was once the youngest laureate ever Lawrence Bragg co recipient with his father William Henry Bragg for physics in 1915 at 25 years of age 97 and one Prime Minister Julia Gillard the first female Prime Minister of Australia have all graduated or attended the University of Adelaide 98 99 100 59 Robin Warren who alongside Barry Marshall discovered that peptic ulcers were largely caused by the infection Helicobacter pylori graduated from the university in the 1950s Warren and Marshall won the Nobel Prize for their discovery in 2005 Other Nobel prizewinners are Howard Florey pharmacologist and pathologist who shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1945 with Sir Ernst Chain and Sir Alexander Fleming for his role in the development of penicillin and J M Coetzee novelist and linguist recipient of the 2003 Nobel Prize in Literature Other notable graduates and professors include Leo Blair the father of British Prime Minister Tony Blair law lecturer at the University of Adelaide while Tony was a child Edward Charles Stirling physiologist politician and advocate for women s suffrage Tim Flannery Australian of the Year Margaret Reid first female president of the Australian Senate Janine Haines first female federal parliamentary leader of an Australian political party Margaret White first female judge of the Supreme Court of Queensland Roma Mitchell first female Queen s Counsel in Australia 1962 Justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia and the first female superior court judge in the British Commonwealth 1965 and first female state Governor and Joni Madraiwiwi Vice President of the Republic of Fiji and Chief Justice of the Republic of Nauru 101 102 See also Edit South Australia portal List of universities in Australia The Environment Institute University of Adelaide College a pre University pathways College for international studentsReferences Edit 2017 University of Adelaide Annual Report PDF adelaide edu au Archived PDF from the original on 29 July 2019 Retrieved 30 July 2019 University of Adelaide appoints its 17th Chancellor Newsroom University of Adelaide Archived from the original on 14 July 2020 Retrieved 15 July 2020 a b Our new Vice Chancellor Archived 2 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine The University of Adelaide 2 February 2021 Retrieved 3 February 2021 Merger advocate appointed new Adelaide University VC Archived 2 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine InDaily 2 February 2021 Retrieved 3 February 2021 a b c d e 2018 Pocket Statistics PDF Archived PDF from the original on 18 October 2018 Retrieved 18 October 2018 University of Adelaide World University Rankings 2013 14 TES Global Ltd 10 August 2021 Archived from the original on 10 May 2015 Retrieved 2 April 2015 Walker R B Davidson John 1834 1881 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Retrieved 8 December 2013 Ruby Davy Archived 19 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine Australian Dictionary of Biography adb anu edu au Neville Hicks and Elisabeth Leopold Mayo Helen Mary 1878 1967 Archived 18 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University 1986 Retrieved 18 April 2018 W B Pitcher Bonython Sir John Langdon 1848 1939 Archived 18 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University 1979 Retrieved 18 April 2018 a b c d The University of Adelaide A Smoke Free University Adelaide edu au 1 July 2010 Archived from the original on 1 December 2010 Retrieved 26 September 2010 Award recognises 30 years of anti smoking work Adelaide edu au 9 October 2009 Archived from the original on 12 April 2011 Retrieved 26 September 2010 Griffiths Luke 19 June 2018 South Australian universities in merger talks The Australian Archived from the original on 21 January 2022 Retrieved 19 June 2018 University of Adelaide and UniSA to explore potential merger to create new institution Archived 19 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine ABC News 19 June 2018 Retrieved 19 June 2018 University of Adelaide and UniSA decide against merger Archived 25 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine ABC News 23 October 2018 Retrieved 24 October 2018 Richards Stephanie 3 June 2022 Uni staff divided over latest merger push InDaily Archived from the original on 5 June 2022 Retrieved 5 June 2022 Moodie Gavin 22 December 2022 The University of Adelaide and UniSA merger talks are back on but other Australian unis are unlikely to follow A Pioneer for Women in Health and Academia Dr Helen Mayo PDF University of Adelaide Archived PDF from the original on 28 November 2019 Retrieved 3 December 2019 Union Building Group City of Adelaide Heritage Places of Adelaide Archived from the original on 18 January 2021 Retrieved 18 January 2021 City of Adelaide 25 July 2002 Assessment of heritage value Union Building Group Adelaide University PDF File 17619 Archived PDF from the original on 21 January 2021 Retrieved 18 January 2021 University of Adelaide masterplan to overhaul North Tce campus Adelaide Now Retrieved 2 January 2017 Uni of Adelaide 20 year masterplan to revitalise North Terrace University of Adelaide Archived from the original on 3 January 2017 Retrieved 2 January 2017 a b Spence Andrew Anderson Elizabeth 16 August 2019 PIRSA SARDI partnership with University of Adelaide helps dryland innovation Stock Journal Archived from the original on 26 March 2020 Retrieved 26 March 2020 Before the Public The News Adelaide 10 November 1924 p 9 Edition Home Archived from the original on 22 August 2022 Retrieved 17 November 2015 via National Library of Australia GIFT OF 10 000 TO THE UNIVERSITY The Advertiser Adelaide 5 June 1929 p 8 Archived from the original on 22 August 2022 Retrieved 30 November 2011 via National Library of Australia Rural farming and agricultural industry news stockjournal com au Archived from the original on 16 October 2015 Retrieved 1 November 2015 Clare Peddie Green light on plant growth Adelaide Advertiser 29 January 2010 Lynette D Zeitz The Waite A Social and Scientific History of the Waite Agricultural Research Institute University of Adelaide Press 2014 pp 82 85 Australian Winemaking The Roseworthy Influence Geoffrey Bishop 1980 Investigator Press Pty Ltd The University of Adelaide www adelaide edu au Archived from the original on 6 December 2016 Retrieved 18 December 2016 National Wine Centre of Australia State Library of South Australia Government of South Australia 16 May 2006 Archived from the original on 30 January 2014 Retrieved 15 November 2013 National Wine Centre Australian Institute of Architects Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 15 November 2013 TEC group Archived 30 October 2005 at the Wayback Machine now referred to as the Centre for Energy Technology Archived 18 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine CET NAAEC Archived 28 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine Ngee Ann Adelaide Education Centre http www adelaide edu au sg Archived 28 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine Ngee Ann Kongsi Archived 14 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine foundation www ngeeann com sg Singapore growth strategy for University Adelaide edu au 21 April 2008 Archived from the original on 13 January 2012 Retrieved 19 October 2010 a b About Ngee Ann Academy Archived from the original on 3 December 2019 Retrieved 3 December 2019 Gavin Walkley St Mark s College The Buildings and Grounds Siebert Bension 5 May 2020 No explanation as University of Adelaide s two top leaders step down ABC News Archived from the original on 27 August 2020 Retrieved 6 May 2020 Harmsen Nick 7 May 2020 ICAC investigating alleged improper conduct by University of Adelaide vice chancellor ABC News Archived from the original on 1 September 2020 Retrieved 7 May 2020 Dodd Tim Penberthy David 8 May 2020 Uni chief faces misconduct probe The Australian Retrieved 27 August 2020 Penberthy David 17 July 2020 University of Adelaide in global hunt for new vice chancellor as talk of merger rekindled The Australian Retrieved 27 August 2020 Adelaide University vice chancellor investigated by ICAC resigns due to ill health www abc net au 20 July 2020 Archived from the original on 27 August 2020 Retrieved 27 August 2020 Egregious disrespect University vice chancellor sexually harassed colleagues ICAC finds www abc net au 26 August 2020 Archived from the original on 28 August 2020 Retrieved 26 August 2020 Statement about an Investigation Misconduct by the Vice Chancellor of the University of Adelaide PDF www icac sa gov au 26 August 2020 Retrieved 27 August 2020 Balter Michael 16 May 2020 Peter Rathjen serial sexual predator Archived from the original on 30 August 2020 Retrieved 31 August 2020 Sexual harassment university s culture under scrutiny after damning findings against vice chancellor www theguardian com 30 August 2020 Archived from the original on 31 August 2020 Retrieved 31 August 2020 Adelaide University defends 326 400 payout to disgraced former vice chancellor Peter Rathjen Archived 8 September 2020 at the Wayback Machine ABC News 8 September 2020 Retrieved 9 September 2020 Adelaide Uni Council votes for faculty mergers www indaily com au 24 August 2021 Archived from the original on 26 September 2021 Retrieved 2 September 2022 Adelaide Faculties adelaide edu au 2 September 2022 Archived from the original on 22 July 2022 Retrieved 2 September 2022 a b About NCALMS National Centre for Aboriginal Languageand Music Studies University of Adelaide Archived from the original on 9 April 2021 Retrieved 13 December 2020 Kaurna Warra Pintyanthi The University of Adelaide Archived from the original on 20 January 2021 Retrieved 13 December 2020 Home Mobile Language Team Archived from the original on 26 December 2020 Retrieved 13 December 2020 Centre for Aboriginal Studies in Music CASM Elder Conservatorium of Music University of Adelaide Archived from the original on 5 November 2020 Retrieved 13 December 2020 Wirltu Yarlu University of Adelaide Archived from the original on 18 December 2020 Retrieved 13 December 2020 Gavin David Young Lectures University of Adelaide Archived from the original on 21 September 2013 Retrieved 20 September 2013 About the Edward Said Memorial Lecture University of Adelaide Archived from the original on 13 October 2008 Retrieved 17 October 2009 2014 Pocket Statistics PDF University of Adelaide Archived PDF from the original on 18 October 2015 Retrieved 1 November 2015 a b c 2017 Pocket Statistics PDF University of Adelaide Archived PDF from the original on 28 January 2018 Retrieved 17 July 2017 Our Performance Archived from the original on 24 July 2019 Retrieved 24 July 2019 HOME Academic Consortium 21 ac21 org Archived from the original on 20 April 2012 Retrieved 1 November 2015 Centre for Automotive Safety Research University of Adelaide Archived from the original on 24 July 2019 Retrieved 24 July 2019 COVID detector dog squad begins hospital duty Archived from the original on 28 July 2022 Retrieved 28 July 2022 Extraterrestrial surface simulation lab launches new chapter in space research Archived from the original on 19 April 2022 Retrieved 28 July 2022 a b QS World University Rankings 2023 Quacquarelli Symonds Limited World University Rankings 2021 Times Higher Education Academic Ranking of World Universities 2022 Shanghai Ranking Consultancy U S News amp World Report Best Global Universities Rankings U S News amp World Report a b CWTS Leiden Ranking 2020 Centre for Science and Technology Studies Leiden University THE 2021 Australia Times Higher Education Academic Ranking of World Universities 2021 Shanghai Ranking Consultancy U S News amp World Report Best Global Universities in Australia U S News amp World Report Australian University Rankings Australian Education Network Academic Ranking of World Universities 2020 Shanghai Ranking Consultancy Archived from the original on 15 August 2019 Retrieved 17 December 2016 QS World University Rankings QS Quacquarelli Symonds Limited Archived from the original on 21 October 2016 Retrieved 17 December 2016 Top Universities in Australia 2021 Times Higher Education Archived from the original on 21 December 2016 Retrieved 17 December 2016 2021 Best Global Universities Rankings U S News amp World Report Archived from the original on 28 October 2014 Retrieved 17 December 2016 Individual ranking Rankings research unsw edu au Retrieved 21 December 2022 On Dit Auu org au Archived from the original on 24 January 2011 Retrieved 26 September 2010 Adelaidean September 2010 contents Adelaide edu au Archived from the original on 20 October 2010 Retrieved 26 September 2010 lumen Lumen Winter 2010 contents Adelaide edu au Archived from the original on 12 November 2010 Retrieved 26 September 2010 University s e press recasts publishing model Archived 26 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine 11 November 2009 The Australian Radio Adelaide Radio Adelaide Archived from the original on 28 June 2010 Retrieved 26 September 2010 Craft Beers and Pizzateca at the Evolved Adelaide UniBar Broadsheet 5 April 2019 Archived from the original on 26 December 2020 Retrieved 26 December 2020 UniBar University of Adelaide Archived from the original on 25 December 2020 Retrieved 26 December 2020 College Green University of Adelaide 24 December 2020 Archived from the original on 26 December 2020 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Von Einem Johnny 22 October 2020 The College Green is turning the University of Adelaide s Cloisters into Adelaide s biggest beer garden CityMag Archived from the original on 5 December 2020 Retrieved 26 December 2020 UniBar Cloisters amp Lawns at Adelaide Uni to host the most epic party series all summer long Glam Adelaide 23 October 2020 Archived from the original on 5 December 2020 Retrieved 26 December 2020 College Green Broadsheet Archived from the original on 26 December 2020 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Little Theatre Only Adelaide Retrieved 9 January 2023 Theatre Guild University of Adelaide Retrieved 9 January 2023 Seagull Independent Theatre 22 April 2022 Retrieved 9 January 2023 Scott Theatre Infrastructure University of Adelaide 13 February 2020 Retrieved 9 January 2023 Scott Theatre at The University of Adelaide 17 February 19 March 2023 Adelaide Fringe Retrieved 9 January 2023 INDIGENOUS DOCTOR IS RHODES SCHOLAR FOR SOUTH AUSTRALIA Archived 2 August 2018 at the Wayback Machine Thursday 26 October 2017 Awards and Achievements The University of Adelaide 17 December 2021 Rerieved 15 January 2023 Lawrence Bragg Biographical Nobel Foundation Archived from the original on 11 October 2014 Retrieved 26 October 2014 Curtis L Hall E 24 June 2010 Gillard becomes first female PM ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on 31 August 2010 Retrieved 13 October 2010 Australia s new PM pays tribute to her great education The University of Adelaide 24 June 2010 Archived from the original on 2 August 2018 Retrieved 26 October 2015 Officers amp Honorary Degree Holders of the University adelaide edu au Archived from the original on 21 October 2015 Retrieved 26 October 2015 http www naurugov nr government information office media release nauru mourns passing of chief justice aspx Archived 14 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine bare URL Former judge is Fiji VP nominee report 13 December 2004 Archived from the original on 14 November 2018 Retrieved 13 November 2018 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to University of Adelaide The University of Adelaide website Adelaide University Union Coordinates 34 55 09 S 138 36 15 E 34 919159 S 138 604140 E 34 919159 138 604140 University of Adelaide Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title University of Adelaide amp oldid 1134698352, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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