The Weekend Post

Looking at life beyond university

The driving force of James Cook University for 15 years, Professor Sandra Harding looks at the lessons learned and the major achievemen­ts of her tenure

- WORDS BY BRONWYN FARR

AFTER 15 years leading worldrenow­ned James Cook University, vivacious vicechance­llor Professor Sandra Harding is stepping back – but she remains passionate about the Far North and the global tropics. Professor Harding has had the longest tenure of any vice-chancellor at an Australian university, having held the position since 2007, creating huge strides forward with initiative­s such as the purchase of land in the city for the Cairns JCU University Hospital.

JCU’s annual revenue has doubled to more than $550m a year.

Professor Harding oversaw a nearly fourfold increase in the size of the JCU Singapore campus, which now has more than 3700 students and has earned Singapore’s highest level of quality assurance.

The university has also more deeply recognised First Nations people by adopting a reconcilia­tion statement.

In 2019, Professor Harding was appointed an Officer in the General Division of the Order of Australia for her distinguis­hed service to education at the national and internatio­nal level, and to the community of Queensland.

“It has been a fairly long haul, and one I have absolutely relished and enjoyed every day,” Professor Harding said.

She is looking forward to long walks from her property near Malanda with her husband, Kevin Harding, and a long-planned overseas ski trip that was skittled by the Covid pandemic.

“We just love it up there, there’s no way we’re going anywhere else – the environmen­t is exquisite, Cairns is a city big enough to be interestin­g without being too busy or anonymous; there’s terrific airlinks. I have no ambition to live in a major city again,” she said.

The energetic academic has been looking through memories as she packs personal papers.

“It is a very strange place to inhabit, and part of the reason for that is as you are going through lots of papers, the things you keep, it tracks all the highs and lows of living a profession­al life intensely, and it’s really interestin­g to look back on all those things,” she said.

Professor Harding is looking forward to “down time” with her extended family.

“I’m involved in a few boards and will continue some of that. I’m certainly not looking for another CEO role – that is done; maybe I will reacquaint myself with my own academic area

Cairns is a city big enough to be interestin­g without being too busy or anonymous; there’s terrific airlinks. I have no ambition to live in a major city again.

and have more time to read the terrific work by internatio­nal colleagues.”

An economic sociologis­t by training, her areas of interest include work, organisati­on and markets and how they work, and she also has an interest in public policy, the global tropics, northern Australia and economic developmen­t.

“There’ve been many highlights, and a lot of that is the fantastic work people do every day at uni, truly marvellous work,” she said.

Professor Harding was responsibl­e for acquiring billions of dollars worth of contracts, including a $96m Technology Innovation Complex which will deliver leading-edge STEM (science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s) innovation, research and educationa­l facilities for northern Queensland.

A particular­ly important feat was producing a paper on the State of the Tropics, which resulted in the United Nations resolving to recognise June 29 as the Internatio­nal Day of the Tropics, something Professor Harding had campaigned for since 2010.

“One thing I was personally quite involved in was leading an internatio­nal consortium on the State of the Tropics report – that was a landmark report aimed at looking at the tropics worldwide, economy and environmen­t.”

It was launched by Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi.

“It was answering a very simple question: is life in the tropics, between Cancer and Capricorn, getting better?” Professor Harding said.

She said it led to ongoing UN talks on the nations of the tropical world and to the State of the Tropics Alliance.

She said recognisin­g the tropics as an important zone of the world was vital and the project combined efforts of 11 global research institutio­ns, “revealing a world that has been largely overlooked, yet is essential to understand­ing the trajectory of the world”.

Professor Harding said moving forward on the JCU University Hospital for Cairns was critical.

“I looked at the Texas Medical Centre – university research, hospitals, hotels, a huge precinct, and the uni hospital in Townsville is adjacent to the uni, a full medical school with clinicians and academics back and forth between the two campuses, serving a major tertiary hospital,” she said.

“Why not Cairns, I always thought, with the attractive­ness of the city, people want to be there and it is well placed with internatio­nal airport services to service the need of the Pacific.

“With this precinct, we can provide such an

exciting opportunit­y for our city and express true excellence in Tropical Health in the broader Pacific.”

She said JCU sought a commitment ahead of the federal election for extra medical school places so all six years of study could be completed in Cairns, leading to clinical placement across the Far North.

“If we can grow them here, they get excited about rural, regional and remote and Pacific areas, and that is the way to get dedicated people, not just people who come in for a couple of years and go back to Sydney,” Professor Harding said.

“There is no reason why we can’t achieve that. We are well on our way – we have state government support, and we will do our part, that’s for sure, and I know we’ll get other interested parties.”

Demolition works started in November at the site of the first $60m stage of the Cairns University Hospital upgrade.

JCU caused a stir last year when it caught the Queensland government by surprise and used federal funding to buy the land required for the entire university hospital project.

JCU is believed to have brokered a deal of up to $25m to buy 12,331sq m of property bounded by Sheridan, Digger and Charles streets in Cairns North.

The masterplan is yet to be finalised. Professor Harding faced intense public scrutiny during a High Court Appeal by physicist Peter Ridd, who was employed by JCU for 27 years until 2018, when he was sacked for breaching the university’s code of conduct after failing to treat others “with respect and courtesy”.

He was dismissed for criticisin­g the work of colleagues on the health of the Great Barrier

Reef and lost his High Court appeal.

Dr Ridd sent an email to a journalist saying the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority and the ARC Centre of Excellence in Coral Reef Studies at James Cook University should “check their facts before they spin their story”, when making claims about the health of the Reef.

JCU is ranked among the world’s top tertiary education institutio­ns.

The Times Higher Education World University Rankings placed JCU within the 251300 bracket of the world’s universiti­es.

The ranking compares more than 1600 institutio­ns worldwide, and was the seventh consecutiv­e year JCU had been ranked in the top 300 of the world’s universiti­es.

Within its overall ranking, JCU performed strongly in terms of the global impact of its research, and the university was ranked 164th in the world for its research influence and role in spreading new knowledge and ideas.

JCU was also recently ranked in the top 201300 universiti­es worldwide by the Academic Ranking of World Universiti­es.

And JCU graduates have a better chance of securing well-paying employment than any other Queensland university, according to the latest edition of the Good Universiti­es Guide.

It awarded JCU a five-star rating for undergradu­ate and postgradua­te employment – the No.1 ranked Queensland university in both categories.

JCU was awarded five stars for graduates’ starting salaries – both undergradu­ate and postgradua­te – placing it within the top 10 of universiti­es nationally.

Founded in Townsville in 1970, JCU has six campuses. It is the second-oldest university in Queensland.

“I’d never lived in anything other than a capital city before heading north and I understood very quickly the joy of living of Cairns and what JCU does matters,” Professor Harding said.

“We are a major employer and we know how important it is to deliver knowledge and research in critical areas of the north’s economic and social wellbeing.

“JCU is part of the DNA for the Far North and I am really proud every day of that connection; it is precious and with it, anything is possible.”

Professor Harding will be succeeded by Professor Simon Biggs, who has said he is excited about strengthen­ing ties with Singapore. He was previously senior deputy vice-chancellor at the University of Western Australia.

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 ?? ?? Professor Sandra Harding speaks at a special function in Cairns on Tuesday in her honour (main photo, then clockwise); with Advance Cairns executive chairman Nick Trompf, director Cairns JCU David Craig and Leichhardt MP Warren Entsch announcing the land purchase for a university hospital; and with principal Lauretta Graham and Bishop of Cairns James Foley touring the new Newman Catholic College at Smithfield.
Professor Sandra Harding speaks at a special function in Cairns on Tuesday in her honour (main photo, then clockwise); with Advance Cairns executive chairman Nick Trompf, director Cairns JCU David Craig and Leichhardt MP Warren Entsch announcing the land purchase for a university hospital; and with principal Lauretta Graham and Bishop of Cairns James Foley touring the new Newman Catholic College at Smithfield.

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