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University of Canterbury

The University of Canterbury is a public research university based in Christchurch, New Zealand. It was founded in 1873 as Canterbury College, the first constituent college of the University of New Zealand. It is New Zealand's second-oldest university.

Campuses
The University of Canterbury has three campuses spread throughout the city of Christchurch: • Ilam Campus: The university has a main campus of at Ilam, a suburb of Christchurch about from the centre of the city. The Ilam campus maintains three libraries with the Central Library () housed in the tallest building on campus, the 11-storey Puaka–James Hight Building. The Ilam campus is where the Faculties of Education, Health, Science, Engineering, Business, Law and Arts are based. The University of Canterbury Students' Association is based there in the Haere roa building. The Ilam Campus is home to cafes and restaurants as well as a pharmacy, bookshop, the UC rec centre and the UC Health centre. • Dovedale Campus: The Dovedale Campus is and became a part of the University of Canterbury when the Christchurch College of Education (a specialist teacher training institution) merged on 1 January 2007. The Dovedale campus is located adjacent to the Ilam campus and is off Dovedale avenue. The campus consists of the old Henry Field Library, The Christchurch College of English, Ilam early Learning Centre and Hayashi and Sonoda student residences. The Faculty of Education also maintains a presence here. • City Campus: The Christchurch City Campus is made up of the Christchurch Arts Centre and the Manawa building which is a part of the Faculty of Health. Music and Classics are again taught from the Christchurch Arts Centre in the old chemistry building, and within the new Manawa building in Christchurch city health and education are taught. The city campus also includes the Teece Museum of Classical Antiquities – home of the James Logie Memorial Collection. The university also maintains additional small campuses in Nelson, Tauranga and Timaru, and teaching centres in Greymouth, New Plymouth, Rotorua and Timaru. The university has staff in regional information offices in Nelson, Timaru, and Auckland. Libraries The UC Library was first established at Canterbury College in 1879. Today there are three libraries on campus each covering different subject areas. Central library The Central Library () The building was renamed Puaka-James Hight in 2014, after the brightest star in the cluster Matariki, to reflect the growing strength of UC's relationship with Ngāi Tahu and the mana of Te Ao Māori at the heart of the university's campus. The University of Canterbury Central Library is the largest university library in New Zealand. The Central Library has collections of over 2 million physical items including books, archives, journals and a miscellany of other items that support research and teaching in Humanities, Social Sciences, Law, Commerce, Music, Fine Arts and Antarctic Studies. • The Henry Field Library (named for the New Zealand Educationalist Henry Edward Field) on the old Christchurch College of Education site joined the fold when the university and Christchurch College of Education merged. However, the Education collection was incorporated into the collections within the Puaka–James Hight Building, and Henry Field is now a library store at the campus off Dovedale Avenue. • A separate Law library was established within the James Hight building, it was then relocated to the new Law building (Mere Mere). However, after the 2011 Christchurch earthquake it returned to the Puaka–James Hight Building and integrated into the Central Library collection. The Mere Mere Building still operates as the Law and Business Building however it is no longer home to the law library. It holds over 100,000 published items including books, audio-visual recordings, and various manuscripts, photographs, works of art, architectural drawings and ephemera. The Macmillan Brown Library's art collection also has over 5,000 works, making it one of the largest collections in the Canterbury Region. Some notable items in its collections include copies of Māori Land Court Records, official and government documents from various Pacific Islands states, trade union records, and the personal papers of various Members of Parliament and government ministers. The library is named after John Macmillan Brown, a prominent Canterbury academic who helped found the library, allocated a large proportion of his fortune to the Macmillan Brown Library. Some of the halls at UC have storied histories; Tupuānuku is named for the star of the same name that is connected to food grown in the ground in the cluster Matariki in Māori Mythology; Rochester and Rutherford is named for former alumni Ernest Rutherford and John Fisher Bishop of Rochester; while Arcady, previously Bishop Julius Hall, was founded by the first Archbishop of New Zealand, Churchill Julius; additionally, College House is the oldest residential college in New Zealand. The University also has a new hall, Tupuārangi, planned for completion in 2026. At Tupuārangi, every room will have its own ensuite. Field facilities The University of Canterbury has the most field stations of any New Zealand university. The Field Facilities Centre administers four of these field stations: • Cass Field Station – Established in 1914 to give students and researchs access to montane grasslands, scrub, riverbed, scree, beech forest, swamp, bog, lake, stream and alpine habitats. • Harihari Field Station – Access to native forests, streams. • Westport Field Station – for study of the West Coast of New Zealand, particularly mining. • Kaikōura Field Station – Kaikōura represents an important transition zone for flora and fauna, particularly in the marine environment, with Kowhai bush and associated rich bird life close by. The university and its project partners also operate an additional field station in the Nigerian Montane Forests Project; this field station stands on the Ngel Nyaki forest edge in Nigeria. The Department of Physical and Chemical Sciences runs its own field laboratories: • Mount John University Observatory at Lake Tekapo for optical astronomical research • Birdlings Flat radar facility • Scott Base radar facility • Cracroft Caverns ring laser facility The Department of Physical and Chemical Sciences also has involvement in the Southern African Large Telescope and is a member of the IceCube collaboration which is installing a neutrino telescope at the South Pole. Teece Museum of Classical Antiquities The University of Canterbury Teece Museum of Classical Antiquities opened in May 2017, and showcases the James Logie Memorial Collection, a collection of Greek, Roman, Egyptian and Near Eastern artefacts in New Zealand. The Teece Museum is run as a part of the faculty of Arts. The museum is named for University of Canterbury Alumni Professor David Teece and his wife Leigh Teece, who donated a substantial amount of money to the city for earthquake recovery. The money was used by the university to install the classics and music school in the Old Chemistry building at the Christchurch Arts Centre. The James Logie Memorial Collection was established in 1957 as a result of Miss Marion Steven, a Classics faculty member, donating Greek pottery to Canterbury University College. Steven established the James Logie Memorial Collection to honour her husband, who served as registrar of the college from 1950 until his death in 1956. The Logie Collection includes a wide range of pottery, beginning with the Bronze Age cultures of Cyprus, Crete and Mycenae it also includes vases that come from Corinth and Athens, the islands in the Aegean, East Greece and the Greek colonies in South Italy and Sicily. ==Organisation and administration==
Organisation and administration
Governance The university was first governed by a board of governors (1873–1933), then by a college council (1933–1957), and since 1957 by a university council. The council is chaired by a chancellor. The Council includes representatives from the faculties, students and general staff, as well as local industry, employer and trade union representatives. The original composition of the board of governors was defined in the Canterbury College Ordinance 1873, which was passed by the Canterbury Provincial Council and named 23 members who might serve for life. Initially, the board was given power to fill their own vacancies, and this power transferred to graduates once their number exceeded 30. At the time, there were discussions about the abolition of provincial government (which did happen in 1876), and the governance structure was set up to give board members "prestige, power and permanence", and "provincial authority and its membership and resources were safely perpetuated, beyond the reach of grasping hands in Wellington."Original members of the Board of Governors were: Charles Bowen, Rev James Buller, William Patten Cowlishaw, John Enys, Charles Fraser, George Gould Sr, Henry Barnes Gresson, William Habens, John Hall, Henry Harper, John Inglis, Walter Kennaway, Arthur C. Knight, Thomas William Maude, William Montgomery, Thomas Potts, William Rolleston, John Studholme, Henry Tancred, James Somerville Turnbull, Henry Richard Webb, Joshua Williams, and Rev William Wellington Willock. Professor Roy Sharp assumed the position of Vice-Chancellor on 1 March 2003. In May 2008 he announced his imminent resignation from the position, following his acceptance of the chief executive position at the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) which he took up on 4 August 2008. The then current Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Professor Ian Town, assumed the role of acting Vice-Chancellor on 1 July 2008. On 15 October 2008 the university announced that Rod Carr, a former banker and the CEO of a local software company, would begin a five-year appointment as Vice-Chancellor on 1 February 2009. Council member and former Pro-Chancellor, Rex Williams, became Chancellor in 2009. Council member John Wood became the new Pro-Chancellor. On 1 January 2012, Wood became Chancellor after Williams retired from the role. As of 2026 the University of Canterbury is divided into seven faculties, which encompass all major departments of both research and teaching. Coat of arms The fleece symbolises the pastoral, and the plough at the base the agricultural background of the province of Canterbury. The bishop's pall and the cross flory represent Canterbury's ecclesiastical connections, and the open book denotes scholarship. As an institution of learning, the university's coat of arms does not have a helmet, crest or mantling. The university's unofficial coat of arms was accompanied by the Latin motto: Because of the land holdings with which the Provincial Government endowed the early University, this was appropriate. When the coat of arms was redesigned, the motto was removed and now the motto is only used unofficially. ==Academic profile==
Academic profile
The University of Canterbury offers 147 undergraduate majors and 61 graduate degrees. For the 2020 academic year, the university granted 2,257 bachelor's degrees, 1,003 graduate degrees, and 384 honours degrees. Following the earthquakes, the number of students enrolled at UC fell from 18,783 during 2010 to 14,725 during 2014, though the number of new enrolments increased in 2014. In 2016 enrolled student numbers rose to 15,564. In the 2026 Quacquarelli Symonds World University Rankings (published 2025), the university attained a position of #261 (5th nationally). In the Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2026 (published 2025), the university attained a position of #601–800 (8th nationally). In the 2025 Academic Ranking of World Universities, the university attained a position of #401–500 (tied 2–4th nationally). In the 2025–2026 U.S. News & World Report Best Global Universities, the university attained a tied position of #542 (4th nationally). In the CWTS Leiden Ranking 2024, the university attained a position of #927 (4th nationally). ==Student life==
Student life
Students' association There are two main student organisations within the University of Canterbury, University of Canterbury Students' Association (UCSA) and Te Akatoki Māori Students' Association. The UCSA is based in Haere-roa, the university’s student union building and main hub for student activity on the Ilam Campus. The original UCSA Building was damaged in the 2010 and 2011 earthquakes and was subsequently torn down, it was rebuilt and completed in 2019. Haere-roa is home to the student bar, The Foundry, and the Ngaio Marsh Theatre, named for the former alumnus of the same name. Haere-roa hosts a number of student societies and organisation offices. The USCA also runs several cafes and restaurants around campus. The university's student population operates the main student magazine, Canta, which was established in 1930. There are 12 issues per year, which are distributed around the UC campus every second Monday during the academic year. The newspaper's offices are in Haere-roa. Canterbury's student population also runs a radio station which began to broadcast and operate as RDU in 1976; it began FM frequency broadcasting in 1986. RDU acquired its present frequency of 98.5 in 2003. Clubs The university has over 140 academic, sporting, recreational and cultural societies and clubs. The most prominent of these include the Student Volunteer Army, the University of Canterbury Engineering Society (ENSOC), the University of Canterbury Law Society (LAWSOC), the University of Canterbury Commerce Society (UCOM) as well as the largest non-faculty clubs such as PongSoc (University of Canterbury Pong Society), Motosoc (Motorsports Society), Lads without Labels, CUBA (Canterbury University Boardriders' Association), CUTC (Tramping Club), UC Global Society (UCGS), UC Bike, Opsoc, The Gentlemen's Club. CUSSC (Canterbury University Snow Sports Club, formerly the CU Ski Club prior to 1997) is the only university club in New Zealand to own a ski field lodge, located at Temple Basin Ski Field. The club runs many events to raise funds for maintenance of their lodge. The University of Canterbury Drama Society (Dramasoc) achieved fame for its 1942–1969 Shakespeare productions under Dame Ngaio Marsh, but regularly performs as an active student- and alumni-run arts fixture in the small Christchurch theatre-scene. In 2011 the SVA was established in the aftermath of the Christchurch earthquakes. A student at the University of Canterbury, Sam Johnson, rallied fellow students to help support the clean-up from the devastation. The club has grown and today is the largest club at the University of Canterbury. In 2020, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the SVA supported the vulnerable with their shopping during the lockdown. Lads without Labels is a not-for-profit charity dedicated to improving men's mental health in and around campus. On 5–8 October 2021 Lads without labels started the Project 72 fundraiser, a 72-hour relay on the University of Canterbury campus, which raised $12,000 for men's mental health; as well in 2021 Lads without labels organised a 24-hour backyard cricket marathon raising $45,000. car decorated as Noah's Ark One major student tradition, the Undie 500, involved an annual car-rally from Christchurch to Dunedin run by ENSOC. The rules required only the use of a road-legal car costing under $500 with a sober driver. The 2007 event gained international news coverage (including on CNN and BBC World) when it ended in rioting in the student quarter of Dunedin and in North East Valley. ENSOC cancelled the planned 2008 event. The Undie 500 was replaced by the Roundie 500 in 2011. This event has the same principles but follows a route through rural Canterbury, returning to Christchurch the same day. ==Notable people==
Notable people
Alumni Since it was founded, University of Canterbury alumni have made significant and creative contributions to society, the arts and sciences, business, national New Zealand, and international affairs. Politics Four New Zealand Prime Ministers have attended Canterbury, including Christopher Luxon, John Key, Bill Rowling, and Jenny Shipley, the latter attended Christchurch Teachers College, now merged with the university. International leaders educated at Canterbury include Feleti Sevele Prime Minister of Tonga, Feleti Teo Prime Minister of Tuvalu and Anote Tong President of Kiribati. Notable politicians who studied at Canterbury include: Ruth Richardson Minister of Finance for the "mother of all budgets" which formed the catalyst of her economic reforms known in the media as "Ruthanasia". Nicola Willis, the current Minister for Finance, also attended Canterbury, as did other former Ministers of Finance Michael Cullen and David Caygill. Former Leaders of the Opposition Judith Collins (though she did not complete her degree) and Don Brash, the latter whom is infamous for his Orewa Speech. Other significant figures include Nick Smith, Rodney Hide, Stuart Nash, Peter Dunne, Marian Hobbs, and Catherine Isaac. Mayors of Christchurch include: Lianne Dalziel, Bob Parker, Vicki Buck and George Manning. It also includes Āpirana Ngata the first Māori to receive a degree, and described as the foremost Māori politician. He was known for his work in promoting and protecting Māori culture and language. He also features on the New Zealand fifty-dollar note. Law Canterbury has produced a large number of distinguished jurists, judges and lawyers around the world. Among its alumni are Supreme Court Justices Andrew Tipping, New Zealand's longest-serving judge, who spent 25 years on the bench, and William Young, also former President of the Court of Appeal. Ivor Richardson, also a former President of the Court of Appeal, is credited with significantly influencing the development of New Zealand tax law and policy. Furthermore, Canterbury has educated six current High Court Judges, including former Chief High Court Judge Geoffrey Venning. Other notable Lawyers include: Matthew Palmer Justice of the Court of Appeal (though he only completed his B.A. at Canterbury); Graham Panckhurst Justice of the High Court and chair of the Royal Commission into the Pike River Mine disaster; and Michael Myers sixth Chief Justice of New Zealand. The New Zealand Government's Attorneys General have included: Judith Collins and Michael Cullen. Mathematics, sciences and economics One of the most notable Canterbury alumni is Ernest Rutherford a physicist described as "the father of nuclear physics", and who features on the New Zealand one hundred-dollar note. In 1908 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry "for his investigations into the disintegration of the elements, and the chemistry of radioactive substances". In 1917 Rutherford "split the atom". Roy Kerr, was also educated at Canterbury, he discovered the Kerr Solution, an exact solution to the Einstein field equation of general relativity. Beatrice Tinsley an astronomer and cosmologist who through her research in the United States in the 1960s and 1970s, proved that the universe was infinite and would expand forever. Richard Barrer was a 'founding father' of zeolite science and its applications he gave his name to the zeolite Barrerite, and the barrer, a unit of gas permeability. Other notable scientists include: Ian Axford, Toby Hendy, Ian Foster, Craig Nevill-Manning and Michelle Rogan-Finnemore. Notable engineers include: John Britten, a mechanical engineer, who designed the Britten motorcycle that won races and set numerous speed records on international circuits; and Bill Pickering, an aerospace engineer, who headed Pasadena, California's Jet Propulsion Laboratory for 22 years. Other notable engineers include Nigel Priestley, Thomas Paulay and David Beauchamp. Economists Rex Bergstrom, Brian Easton, Ken Henry, Graham Scott and John McMillan attended Canterbury. Don Brash, who received a B.A. and M.A. in economics, also served as Governor of the Reserve Bank. He presided over the reforms of central-bank autonomy and accountability under the Public Finance Act 1989 which were described as "genuine innovations". • Rita Angus – painter • Ian Axford – space scientist • Michael Baigent – author and archaeologist • Rosemary Banks – ambassador to the United Nations • David Beauchamp – civil engineer • Rex Bergstrom – academic and economist • Don Brash – former Governor of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and former leader of the opposition • Althea Carbon – lawyer and co-founder of Charity-IT • Eleanor Catton – writer and Man Booker Prize winner 2013 • Neil Cherry – environmental scientist • Mark Chignell – academic • Nathan Cohen – world champion and Olympic champion rower • Judith Collins – politician and former leader of the National PartyMichael P. Collins – academic • Helen Connon – educational pioneer • Michael Cullen – former deputy prime minister and minister of finance • Lianne Dalziel – 46th mayor of Christchurch • Stevan Eldred-Grigg – historian and novelist • Ian Foster – computer scientist • Rob Fyfe – businessman and former Air New Zealand CEO • Roy Good – artist and designer • Edith Searle Grossmann – writer and journalist • Henry Hargreaves – photographer • Rhona Haszard – artist • Joel Hayward – academic • Toby Hendy – science communicator • Ken Henry – Secretary to the Treasury (Australia) • Rodney Hide – politician • Jock Hobbs – former captain of the All BlacksMarian Hobbs – politician • Nina Oberg Humphries – artist • Catherine Isaac – politician • Bruce Jesson – writer • Jess Johnson – artist • Roger Kerr – executive director of the New Zealand Business RoundtableRoy Kerr – mathematician and physicist, discovered the Kerr geometry • John Key – 38th prime minister of New Zealand • Howard Kippenberger – military leader • Jordan Luck – musician • Christopher Luxon – 42nd prime minister of New Zealand and former CEO of Air New Zealand • Euan Macleod – painter • Margaret Mahy – author of children's and young adult books • Ngaio Marsh – crime writer and theatre director • Lucas Martin, race walker • Julie Maxton – academic administrator • John McMillan – economist • Colleen Mills – communications professor • Trevor Moffitt – painter • Stuart Nash – politician • Sam Neill – actor • Craig Nevill-Manning – engineer • Sir Āpirana Ngata – lawyer and statesman; first Māori person to complete a degree at a New Zealand university • William Orange – Anglican churchman and founder of Latimer House • Matthew Palmer – Justice of the Court of Appeal of New Zealand • Graham Panckhurst – Justice of the High Court of New Zealand • Thomas Paulay – earthquake engineer • Bill Pickering – engineering administrator • J. G. A. Pocock – historian • Nigel Priestley – earthquake engineer • Ivor Richardson – president of the Court of Appeal of New Zealand • Ruth Richardson – lawyer and former minister of finance • Michelle Rogan-Finnemore — geologist, legal expert, Antarctic program manager • Bill Rowling – 30th prime minister of New Zealand • Theia – musician • Ernest Rutherford – physicist and Nobel laureate in chemistry • Graham Cecil Scott – economist, government official, international consultant • Walter Lawrence Scott – British colonial officer • Feleti Vakaʻuta Sevele – 14th prime minister of Tonga • Jenny Shipley – 36th prime minister of New Zealand • Nick Smith – politician • Kevin Smith – actor • John Storey – rower • Mahiriki Tangaroa – painter • Margaret Thomson – film director • Beatrice Tinsley – astronomer • Sir Andrew Tipping – former Justice of the Supreme Court of New Zealand • Anote Tong – 4th president of Kiribati ==In popular culture==
In popular culture
, during the 1950s. • Heavenly Creatures (1994) – Based on the Parker–Hulme murder case, Juliet Hulme (later known as Anne Perry) was the daughter of Henry Hulme, the rector of the University of Canterbury, and she and Pauline Parker murdered Honorah Parker, Pauline's mother. During this period Juliet and her family lived on campus in the Ilam homestead (now the University of Canterbury Staff Club), where filming for the movie took place. ==Notes==
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