In 2005, the Israeli government supported upgrading the college to university status. The change of status was not immediate since the Council for Higher Education in Israel must approve such changes. In July 2006, the Council rejected a proposal to merge several regional colleges in the
Galilee. Based on the findings of a committee appointed by the council, it was decided not to approve the establishment of any new universities in Israel for the next five years. Upgrading the college to university status was controversial. Settlements such as Ariel are considered illegal under international law by the international community, and Palestinians see them as an obstacle to peace, British Foreign Office minister
Alistair Burt also said he was disappointed in the decision and called on Israel to reverse the decision. In August 2007, the college was renamed the "Ariel University Center of Samaria." Although Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert endorsed the change, both
Minister of Education Yuli Tamir and the Council for Higher Education objected, with the latter announcing in 2008 that they would not recognise degrees awarded by the college. The name change was recognised in 2010, although the college remained without university accreditation until July 2012. On 24 December 2012, Israeli Defense Minister
Ehud Barak ordered the
Central Command to officially recognize the upgrade of Ariel University to a fully accredited institution of higher learning. On 12 February 2018, the
Knesset passed legislation placing Israeli colleges in
Judea and Samaria under the direct authority of Israel's higher education establishment, ending a long-standing distinction between schools in and outside of pre-1967 Israel. Under the new law, the separate higher education council for Judea and Samaria was abolished, and all Israeli colleges operating in Judea and Samaria were placed under the supervision of the Council for Higher Education in Israel. ==Students and faculty==