The vice-chancellor of the Australian National University (ANU) has tendered her resignation after a tumultuous two years at the institution, marked by redundancies, proposed course closures, and allegations of a toxic work culture.
Multiple sources confirmed Prof Genevieve Bell had advised the council of her decision on Wednesday evening, with Provost Rebekah Brown to be interim vice chancellor until a replacement is found.
Pressure was mounting for Bell to exit after five of the six college deans advised the council and chancellor, Julie Bishop, that they no longer had confidence in her leadership, sources confirmed.
Last week, Bishop held a full day of meetings on campus with deans, council members and members of the union, sources told Guardian Australia.
She returned to campus on Wednesday to meet with members of the ANU governance project, a group of academics and staff who formed this year amid a growing “crisis of confidence” in leadership at the university, and again met with members of the union on Thursday morning.
It followed the release of a scathing report by the governance project which found 96% of around 600 respondents believed ANU’s governance was not fit for purpose and should be reformed, including 51% who said it required a complete overhaul.
“The community is deeply dissatisfied with the way ANU is currently managed and run,” the report found. “Participants described ANU governance as dominated by opaque appointments and networks of privilege rather than transparent, community-trusted processes.”
Bishop said she commended the group’s “excellent work” to address some of the most “complex challenges” facing the university and broader sector.
“I value deeply the feedback we have received from across the ANU community, and I will be encouraging council to engage in open and constructive dialogue with the group on the proposed recommendations,” she said.
ANU’s governance has come under increased scrutiny over a drastic restructure that has led to at least 399 redundancies and the proposed disestablishment of the Australian National Dictionary Centre, the centre for European studies, the humanities research centre and the ANU School of Music.
Around 100 staff are still facing the axe as part of the Renew ANU process, the National Tertiary Education Union (Nteu) estimates.
An investigation into ANU by the The Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency (Teqsa) is ongoing after “significant concerns” were raised by Jason Clare in a rare commonwealth intervention into university governance in June.
ANU has since released its self assurance report and cover letter for Teqsa, and will undertake its own investigation into its council and senior leadership team after a prominent academic alleged at a Senate inquiry last month that she was “bullied into near suicide” while serving on ANU’s university council and suffered a miscarriage in the weeks after two distressing meetings with Bishop.
The notice to Teqsa revealed there had been 627 psychosocial risk and hazard reports logged by staff in 2024 and 337 in the year to date.
In a statement in August, Bishop said: “I reject any suggestion that I have engaged with council members, staff, students and observers in any way other than with respect, courtesy and civility.
“The witness concerned has initiated grievance proceedings and it is not appropriate for me to comment further at this time.”
Independent senator David Pocock has been consistently calling for Bell and Bishop to step aside after Renew ANU began 12 months ago.
“Her leadership has over recent months become untenable,” he said. “While there is broad understanding of the need to put the ANU on a more sustainable financial footing, there have been serious failures of leadership and governance in the implementation of Renew ANU.
Pocock said he endorsed the council’s decision but further leadership changes were needed.
“Most importantly, there must be a stop to any further forced redundancies … until there is more transparency over the ANU’s financial position and genuine consultation over a way forward.”
The Nteu ACT division secretary, Dr Lachlan Clohesy, welcomed the news but said ANU’s crisis management distracted from the fact “over one hundred people still face forced redundancies”.
“The ANU community has suffered significant damage,” he said. “This needs to end.”
A grassroots group of academics campaigning against the staff cuts, Our ANU, said the damage caused by the restructure had “undermined disciplines and the university’s reputation”.
“The issues at the heart of this crisis go beyond the vice chancellor. This has been years in the making, the product of deep governance failures that have damaged the university’s finances, reputation, and community trust.
“Only genuine accountability will allow ANU to reset and rebuild.”