The rector of the University of St Andrews has been reinstated to its governing body for a second time during a tumultuous term in office, with both sides claiming victory after a legal battle over governance.
Stella Maris said on 12 March that she would be resuming all her duties in the role â an elected position that is intended to provide an independent voice for students â after an appeal against her dismissal was successful.
But the university said the legal judgment had vindicated its decision to remove Maris as a court member and charity trustee in January 2026.
The reinstatement follows Maris âreversing her positionâ on whether all court members are bound by collective responsibility, St Andrews highlighted. Â
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Maris, who has been rector since November 2023, was previously dismissed after she accused Israel of genocide in an email to students, eventually winning an appeal against this decision.
The latest row centres on the Scottish universityâs governance rules and whether court members can publicly disagree with decisions it makes.
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âMs Stella Maris had refused to accept she was bound by collective responsibility, which applies to all charity trustees and members of court,â said the university in a .
âMs Maris had also claimed that she alone had the authority to chair the St Andrews Court and should have absolute discretion over all aspects of its meetings.â
It said Maris had âattempted to overrule standard operating procedures and take the chair at the October 2025 meetingâ.
After the court voted to uphold to its normal procedures, âshe accused her fellow members of acting unlawfullyâ, the university added.
In his judgment, Lord Keen concluded that the universityâs rules did state that the rector should be bound by collective responsibility, and that it was the universityâs âsenior lay memberâ who chairs the substantive business of the court.
But he agreed to quash the decision to remove Maris from the court if she agreed to âprovide an unqualified undertaking that she will adhere to this position for the remainder of her term of officeâ â something that Maris has now provided in writing.
Maris, whose term as rector ends in October, clarified in a statement that in doing so she was ânot undertaking to give up my right to disagreement or to judicial reviewâ.
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In a further statement posted on , Maris said the dispute âgoes to the heart of how universities govern themselvesâ and âwhether members of a governing body can be removed simply for maintaining their disagreement with a decision once it has been madeâ.
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She said the university had asserted that collective responsibility required silence but âmy position was that it requires compliance with decisions but cannot operate as a perpetual gag on disagreementâ, claiming that the appeal decision âmakes clear that disagreement itself cannot be treated as misconductâ.
She called for an âindependent investigationâ into how the decision to dismiss her had been reached, alleging âmultiple breachesâ of the courtâs code of conduct.
âMore broadly, this moment should remind us of something fundamental about the purpose of universities and the communities they serve,â Maris added.
âWe must foster an environment where those who speak out against atrocities, genocide, illegal wars and abuses of power are not punished for doing so.â
A spokesperson for the university court said that it was pleased its decision had been âvindicatedâ, adding that courts have an âimportant duty and burden of responsibility to oversee the good governance and strategic decisions of our universitiesâ.
âThat burden has never been greater given the considerable challenges facing the higher education sector just now.
âThe rectorâs attempt to exercise sole authority disrupted a key meeting held to focus on St Andrews Universityâs finances, and these matters have been a sustained distraction to operations over several months.
âNow this issue is behind us, it is our hope that all court members will at all times act in the best interests of the university, its students, and staff.â
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