A crisis at the University of Adelaide has raised difficult leadership questions for the sector as the scandal surrounding a former vice-chancellor entangles two other Australian institutions.
Peter Rathjen resigned on 20 July, citing âill healthâ, amid a misconduct investigation by the Independent Commissioner Against Corruption (ICAC). The following month, commissioner Bruce Lander that Professor Rathjen had sexually harassed two female staff, had engaged in inappropriate sexual relations with another woman and had lied about these matters to the chancellor at the time, Kevin Scarce.
Mr Lander also revealed that Professor Rathjen had been investigated in 2019 over âvery seriousâ allegations of sexual misconduct against a University of Melbourne postgraduate. The allegations reportedly related to Professor Rathjenâs tenure as Melbourneâs science dean between 2006 and 2008 and were upheld, but Adelaideâs governing council and chancellor were not informed at the time.
The commissioner made eight recommendations about sexual harassment policies, conflict of interest, reporting of misconduct and engagement of external lawyers. Adelaide has pledged to adopt all eight, while the universities of Melbourne and Tasmania â where Professor Rathjen was vice-chancellor from 2011 to 2017 â are examining whether their policies accord with the recommendations.
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Melbourne said it had âcooperatedâ with the ICAC investigation and had provided a report of the 2019 investigation. In a message to staff and students, vice-chancellor Duncan Maskell stressed the universityâs âunequivocal commitmentâŠto a culture of safety and respect for allâ.
Tasmania announced a review to uncover âunreported or undetected issues arising from Peter Rathjenâs term hereâ. Vice-chancellor Rufus Black said Melbourne barrister Maree Norton had been appointed to take reports from people who did not want to disclose grievances directly to the university, and to advise on measures Tasmania should take âin light of any complaintsâ.
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Meanwhile, Adelaideâs council has disclosed details of Professor Rathjenâs A$326,400 (ÂŁ182,300) severance package â covering his statutory leave entitlements and âreduced notice periodâ â and explained why the council decided to pay him out while he was under investigation.
A âsubstantial specialist medical reportâ had âsupported the claim of ill-healthâ, the council told staff, while ICAC secrecy provisions meant that the university was âunawareâ at the time of his âadditional misconductâ.
The episode has prompted soul-searching over how an apparent serial sexual predator continued to secure promotions and rose to lead one of Australiaâs elite universities.
Commentators have asked whether sufficient due diligence was undertaken before Professor Rathjenâs appointment at Adelaide, and what steps selection panels should now take to ensure that their leadership picks have unblemished backgrounds.
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Karin Sanders, a human resources expert at UNSW Sydney, said sexual harassers were likely to be skilled at âwindow dressingâ and making themselves attractive to appointment panels. âIt is the same capability they use on women,â she said, adding that universities where such individuals have worked might not be keen to warn recruiters about their behaviour because âpeople are so happy that the person is leavingâ.
She said one solution might be a registry where universities were obliged to record sexual misconduct perpetrators to apprise potential recruiters. But only proven allegations should be recorded, she stressed.
Another suggestion is that panels could crowdsource the problem by asking people to share adverse details about leadership aspirants. But such an approach could trigger floods of claims that made the recruitment process unwieldy, while subverting natural justice by denying people employment because of unproven allegations.
Liwen Zhang, a UNSW Sydney human resources lecturer who specialises in recruitment, said selection committees should question applicantsâ referees rather than seeking public feedback.
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Dr Zhang also recommended scouring the internet for evidence of candidatesâ misdeeds.
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