Cardiff University has questioned the future of its court, and the bodyâs role in the selection of the chancellor, six months after it blocked the appointment of Griff Rhys Jones to the ceremonial post.
A consultation has been launched that asks: âGiven that council is the governing body of the university, is there a continuing role for the court?â
It also asks if future chancellors should continue to be appointed by the court on the recommendation of the council, or whether the final choice should lie with the council â either acting alone or after a nominations process carried out with court representation.
It was in April that Cardiff suffered the embarrassment of being forced to call off the announcement of Mr Rhys Jones as chancellor after the court refused to ratify the comedianâs selection by the council.
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By this time â about half an hour before the appointment was due to be made public â the university had already distributed photographs of Mr Rhys Jones in the chancellorâs robes to the media.
It was claimed that the council had not indicated that the serving chancellor, Nobel prizewinning scientist Sir Martin Evans, was eligible for reappointment. Mr Rhys Jones withdrew from consideration, and Sir Martin embarked on a second term.
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Brian Ford, a tutor in the University of Cambridgeâs Institute of Continuing Education and a member of the court, has written to Cardiff vice-chancellor Colin Riordan saying he is ânot the only person to be perplexedâ by the consultation.
âIt seems to call into question the very existence of court,â writes Professor Ford. âYet, as recent events have shown, it is clear that it is only the existence of the university court that ensures that the governance of Cardiff is properly monitored.â
The consultation asks about the term of office of the chancellor and whether a second term should be permitted.
A Cardiff spokeswoman said the court âwas advised that it would be consultedâ as part of the process, with a recent survey of its 220 members used to gather views. She also insisted that there were âno plansâ to abolish the court.
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