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Revision as of 01:20, 3 September 2014

Margaret Elaine Gardner
BEcon Hons., PhD Syd, Hon.DUniv Grif, AO, FAIM, GAICD
In office
2014–Current
Preceded byEd Byrne
Personal details
SpouseGlyn Davis
Alma materUniversity of Sydney
ProfessionEconomist

Professor Margaret Elaine Gardner, AO is an Australian academic, community leader and economist, and the current Vice-Chancellor of Monash University in Melbourne, Australia.[1]

Education

Prof. Gardner earned a bachelor's degree in economics with first class honours from the University of Sydney, and later a PhD with a thesis on Australian industrial relations. Following the completion of her PhD, she was awarded a Fulbright Postdoctoral Fellowship and studied in the United States at the University of California, Berkeley, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Cornell University.[2]

Career as an academic

Prof. Gardner has had a prominent career as an academic, and has served in executive positions with Deakin University, Griffith University and Queensland University of Technology.[2]

Prior to her appointment as the Vice-Chancellor of RMIT, she was the Deputy Vice-Chancellor of the University of Queensland.[2] Prof. Gardner was appointed Vice-Chancellor of RMIT on 4 April 2005, taking over from care-taker Vice-Chancellor Chris Whitaker.

Monash University announced on the 17 December 2013 that she will take over as Vice-Chancellor of Monash on 1 September 2014.

Vice-Chancellor of RMIT

At the time of Prof. Gardner's appointment to Vice-Chancellor, RMIT was at a crucial point in its 118 year history.[3] RMIT's previous Vice-Chancellor Prof. Ruth Dunkin resigned after only four years in the position,[4] and the university was fighting to overcome a A$24 million budget shortfall in 2004 that left it teetering on the edge of disaster.[3][4]

By the end of her first year as Vice-Chancellor, RMIT had posted a A$23.2 million surplus for 2005 which increased to a A$50.1 million surplus by 2007.[5] The fast turn around in finances at RMIT was achieved through the sale of property in the university's extensive real estate portfolio, a 9% increase in student fees and cutting 180 staff positions.[5]

Other current leadership roles

Executive:[2]

Membership:

Professional works

Prof. Gardner has authored, co-authoured and edited a number of texts in the fields of industrial relations and human resource management,[6] which have been widely used as course texts in Australian universities. She's also a regular contributor to a wide range of international journals and speaker at various academic and government conferences.

Between 1998 and 2002, as Chair of two major Queensland Government taskforces, Prof. Gardner also authored three government reviews: "Queensland Industrial Relations Legislation", "Pathways Articulation Through the Post-Compulsory Years of School to Further Education Training" and "Labour Market Participation".

A selection of Prof. Gardner's research is available from the RMIT Research Repository.[7]

Honours

In 2007, Prof. Gardner was made an Officer of the Order of Australia in the Australia Day Honours, for her "service to tertiary education, particularly in the areas of university governance and gender equity; and to industrial relations in Queensland".[8] She's also an Honorary Doctor of Griffith University.

Personal life

Her husband Prof. Glyn Davis, AC, is also the current Vice-Chancellor of the University of Melbourne, and together they are regularly referred to as "Melbourne's top academic couple".[9]

References

  1. ^ Preiss, Benjamin (18 December 2013). "RMIT University vice-chancellor Margaret Gardner set to be first woman to lead Monash University". The Age.
  2. ^ a b c d Professor Margaret Gardner, AO - RMIT University
  3. ^ a b RMIT's new chief one of a vice-chancellor pair (David Rood) - The Age, 22 January 2005
  4. ^ a b Picking up the poisoned chalice (David Rood) - The Age, 9 April 2005
  5. ^ a b RMIT is back in the black (Lisa MacNamara) - The Australian, 2 May 2007
  6. ^ Author: Gardner, Margaret Elaine - National Library of Australia
  7. ^ Author: Gardner, M - RMIT Research Repository
  8. ^ 2007 Australia Day Honours: Media Notes - Office of the Governor-General of Australia
  9. ^ The thinking Australian's Posh and Becks (David Cohen), The Guardian - 10 January 2006

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