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University of Otago

The University of Otago is a public research collegiate university based in Dunedin, Otago, New Zealand. It was established by ordinance of the Otago Provincial Council in 1869 and opened for teaching in 1871, making it New Zealand's oldest university. Between 1874 and 1961 Otago was part of the federal University of New Zealand and conferred degrees in its name. In July 2023 the university adopted the Māori identity Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka as part of a major rebrand, with the changes taking effect from May 2024.

History
(Clocktower Building), looking east. runs through in the centre. 19th century The Otago Association's plan for the European settlement of southern New Zealand, conceived under the principles of Edward Gibbon Wakefield in the 1840s, envisaged a university. Dunedin leaders Thomas Burns and James Macandrew urged the Otago Provincial Council during the 1860s to set aside a land endowment for an institute of higher education. An ordinance of the council established the university in 1869, giving it of land and the power to grant degrees in Arts, Medicine, Law and Music. Burns was named Chancellor but he did not live to see the university open on 5 July 1871. Ethel Benjamin graduated LLB in 1897. Later that year she became the first woman in the British Empire to appear as counsel in court. 20th century The University of Otago helped train medical personnel as part of the Otago University Medical Corps. They supplied or trained most of the New Zealand Army's doctors and dentists during the First World War. Professor Robert Jack made the first radio broadcast in New Zealand from the Department of Physics on 17 November 1921. Queen Elizabeth II visited the university library with the Duke of Edinburgh on 18 March 1970. This was the first time the royals completed informal "walkabouts" to meet the public, and it was the first visit of Prince Charles (then 21 years old) and Princess Anne (19 years) to this country. 21st century In May 2010 the university joined the Matariki Network of Universities (MNU) together with Dartmouth College (US), Durham University (UK), Queen's University (Canada), University of Tübingen (Germany), University of Western Australia (Australia) and Uppsala University (Sweden). Beginning in 2015 university Vice-Chancellor Harlene Hayne and Pro-Vice-Chancellor Tony Ballantyne implemented cuts in academic and support staff which generated enduring controversy. In this context The New Zealand Herald characterised the university's 'climate' as one of top-down 'suppression and fear' for its employees. The Otago Daily Times reported on 'demoralised teachers and researchers' who were 'locked in pain and anger at what their institution had become' and later opined that 'the university desperately needs a reset'. In 2020 the University of Otago announced that Hayne would be leaving the university and that Ballantyne would be given a new role, namely, leading the Division of External Engagement to attend to alumni relations and liaising with secondary schools, among other matters. In December 2020, eight graduation ceremonies scheduled for that month were disrupted following threats to carry out a firearms and explosives attack on students attending graduation ceremonies scheduled for 7 and 8 December. On 18 December, a 22-year-old woman appeared in the Auckland District Court on charges of threatening harm to people or property. Court documents have described the threat as being of a "magnitude surpassing the 15 March Christchurch mosque massacres." On 14 July 2021, the woman, who has interim name suppression, admitted to threatening to carry out a firearms and explosives attack against Otago students. Her lawyer applied for a discharge without conviction. On 12 May 2022, the woman was sentenced to five months community detention and nine months intensive supervision. According to the University Chancellor, the bomb threat and subsequent cancellation of eight graduation ceremonies caused the University NZ$1.3 million. In mid-April 2023, Otago University reported that it was facing a NZ$60 million deficit due to declining student enrolments and a shortfall in government funding. In response, Acting Vice-Chancellor Professor Helen Nicholson stated that the university was considering laying off several hundred staff members including academics. This marked the first time since its founding in 1878 that the university has faced a major debt crisis. According to the Otago Daily Times, the university had only started borrowing in mid-December 2022, incurring a year-end debt of NZ$30 million. While the university was able to come out of debt in January 2023 following a regular injection of government funding, the university subsequently incurred more debt in 2023 due to its capital programme of refurbishing existing buildings and building new buildings. In response, students staged a protest against the proposed cuts. Otago University Students Association president Quintin Jane also called on Education Minister Jan Tinetti to increase funding for universities. In late May 2023, the Otago Daily Times reported that the university had declined to inform staff of its NZ$60 million budget shortfall in November 2022. In late June 2023, the government announced a NZ$128 million funding injection for degree-level and postgraduate programmes for New Zealand universities and other tertiary institutions. In response, acting vice-chancellor Nicholson stated that the university would still proceed with job cuts since the funding would only come into effect from 2024 onwards. In March 2024, Grant Robertson was designated as the next vice-chancellor, commencing July 2024. This announcement was accompanied by a 'major' 'almost wholesale' replacement of the university leadership. In mid May 2024, the Otago Daily Times reported that donations to the University's Foundation Trust had declined from NZ$12.25 million in 2022 to NZ$7.09m in 2023. University development and alumni relations office director Shelagh Murray attributed the decline in donor funding to the ongoing impact of COVID-19, the economic recession and the cost-of-living crisis on individuals and businesses. In early March 2026, the University confirmed plans to establish a new campus in Queenstown, including a range of undergraduate and postgraduate courses and a purpose-built student accommodation by 2030. ==Campuses and facilities==
Campuses and facilities
Campuses The University of Otago's main campus is in Dunedin, which hosts the Central Administration as well as its Health Sciences, Humanities, Business School, and Sciences divisions. In addition, the university has four satellite campuses in Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch, and Invercargill. • The Christchurch campus is based at the Christchurch School of Medicine and Health Science. It also provides medical and physiotherapy clinical training programs, research, distance education, and postgraduate programs. • The Wellington campus is based at the Wellington School of Medicine and Health Science. It also provides medical and physiotherapy clinical training programs, research, distance education, and postgraduate programs. • The Auckland campus is based at the Auckland Centre on Queen. The Auckland Centre provides various teaching and distance learning courses and serves as a liaison with the wider Auckland community and alumni. • The Southland Campus (Ahuahu Te Mātauranga) is a branch of the University of Otago College of Education. The campus provides a range of early childhood, primary, primary bilingual, and secondary teacher education programs. • The University of Otago's Department of Marine Science also operates the Portobello Marine Laboratory in the Otago peninsula. Libraries The University of Otago has nine libraries: six based in Dunedin on the main university campus, the education library in Southland, plus two medical libraries in Wellington and Christchurch. All libraries have wireless access. Central Library The Central Library is part of the Information Services Building and has over 2000 study spaces, 130 computer terminals, and laptop connections at 500 desks. It has Te Aka a Tāwhaki, a collection of Māori resources, and the Special Collections consisting of about 9,000 books printed before 1801. In total, the Central Library has over 800,000 print and electronic materials relating to the arts and humanities, commerce, education, physical education, social sciences, and technology. It was designed by the American architecture firm Hardy Holzman Pfeiffer and opened in 2001, replacing what was previously a 1960s-era modernist building. Robert Stout Law Library The Robert Stout Law Library is the university's law library and is based in the Richardson Building. Health Sciences Library The Health Sciences Library Robertson Library The Robertson Library is the university's education library and is jointly run by the University of Otago's College of Education and Otago Polytechnic, which is also located near the university's Dunedin campus. Other libraries The Wellington Medical and Health Sciences Library and the Canterbury Medical Library provide services to University of Otago students and staff, and the staff of the local District Health Boards. The university's Southland Campus also has a library. ==Organisation and administration==
Organisation and administration
Organisation The university is divided into four academic divisions: • Division of Humanities • Division of Health Sciences • Division of Sciences • Otago Business School (Division of Commerce) For external and marketing purposes, the Division of Commerce is known as the Otago Business School, as that is the term commonly used for its equivalent in North America. Historically, there were a number of schools and faculties, which have now been grouped with stand alone departments to form these divisions. In addition to the usual university disciplines, the University of Otago Medical School (founded 1875) is one of only two medical schools in New Zealand (with component schools in Dunedin, Christchurch and Wellington); and Otago is the only university in the country to offer training in Dentistry. Other professional schools and faculties not found in all New Zealand universities include Pharmacy, Physical Education, Physiotherapy, Medical Laboratory Science, and Surveying. It was also home to the School of Mines, until this was transferred to the University of Auckland in 1987. Theology is also offered, traditionally in conjunction with the School of Ministry, Knox College, and Holy Cross College, Mosgiel. There are also a number of service divisions including: • External Engagement Division • Financial Services Division • Human Resources Division • Information Technology Services Division • Property Services Division • Research Division • Student and Academic Services Division • Operations Division • Campus Development Division • Campus and Collegiate Life Services Division • Academic Division • Health, Safety and Wellbeing Merger with Dunedin College of Education The University of Otago and the Dunedin College of Education (a specialist teacher training institution) merged on 1 January 2007. The University of Otago College of Education is now based on the college site, and includes the college's campuses in Invercargill and Alexandra. Staff of the university's Faculty of Education relocated to the college site. A merger had been considered before, however the present talks progressed further, and more amicably, than previously. Residential colleges The University of Otago owns, or is in affiliation with, fourteen residential colleges, which provide food, accommodation, social and welfare services. Most of these cater primarily for first year students, though some have a sizeable number of second and higher year undergraduates, as well as occasionally a significant postgraduate population. While some teaching is normally undertaken at a college, this generally represents a small percentage of a resident's formal tuition. Most colleges actively seek to foster a sense of community and academic achievement amongst their members through, variously, intercollegiate competitions, communal dining, apartment groups, traditionalism, independent students' clubs, college events and internal sporting and cultural societies. The colleges are geographically spread over the Dunedin urban area: • Aquinas CollegeArana CollegeCaroline Freeman CollegeCarrington College192 Castle CollegeCumberland CollegeHayward CollegeKnox CollegeSalmond CollegeSelwyn CollegeSt Margaret's CollegeStudholme CollegeTe Rangihīroa CollegeToroa CollegeUniversity College In mid October 2019, the University of Otago announced that it would be building a new 450-room residential college called Te Rangi Hiroa, which will replace the current Te Rangi Hiroa College along Cumberland Street. The new college is estimated to cost NZ$90 million and is located on the corner of Albany and Forth Streets near the Dunedin campus. Coat of arms In mid-March 2023, the university unveiled a new proposed logo replacing the traditional coat of arms with a symbol and a new Māori name for the institution as part of its Vision 2040 strategy. The process was spearheaded by Tony Ballantyne and the university's Division of External Engagement. The proposed symbol is intended to symbolise the Otakou channel in Otago harbour while the coat of arms will be retained for ceremonial settings such as graduation events. The proposal also involves changing the current Māori name from Te Whare Wānanga o Otāgo to Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka ("A Place of Many Firsts"). Acting Vice-Chancellor Professor Helen Nicholson stated that the proposed logo and name change was intended to create a visual identity that reflected modern Aotearoa New Zealand. The university also launched a consultation process for staff, students and alumni that will conclude on 16 April 2023. On 17 March 2023, an Otago Daily Times survey found that 77% (1,908) of 2,479 respondents opposed the proposed logo change. The process was also criticised for costing about $700,000 whilst large numbers of academic staff were made redundant on the grounds of budgetary shortfalls. On 11 July 2023, the University council voted to proceed with the logo and alternate Māori name change following a consultation process with staff, students, and alumni. Three quarters of respondents voted to replace the coat of arms with the O-shaped symbol while two thirds voted to change the Māori name from Te Whare Wānanga o Otāgo to Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka ("A Place of Many Firsts"). The new logo will be rolled out from March 2024 over a 12-month period at a cost of NZ$1.3 million. ==Academic profile==
Academic profile
Distinctions Many Fellowships add to the diversity of the people associated with "Otago". They include: • Robert Burns Fellowship (literature) • Caroline Plummer Fellowship in Community Dance • Charles Hercus Fellowship • Claude McCarthy Fellowship • Foxley Fellowship • Frances Hodgkins Fellowship (art) • Henry Lang Fellowship • Hocken Fellowship • Mozart Fellowship (music) • THB Symons Fellowship • William Evans Visiting Fellowship In 1998, the Department of Physics gained some fame for making the first Bose–Einstein condensate in the Southern Hemisphere. The 2006 Government investigation into research quality (to serve as a basis for future funding) ranked Otago the top University in New Zealand overall, taking into account the quality of its staff and research produced. It was also ranked first in the categories of Clinical Medicine, Biomedical Science, Law, English Literature and Language, History and Earth Science. The Department of Philosophy received the highest score for any nominated academic unit. Otago had been ranked fourth in the 2004 assessment. In 2006, a report released by the Ministry of Research, Science and Technology found that Otago was the most research intensive university in New Zealand, with 40% of staff time devoted to research and development. Journal "Science" has recommended worldwide study of Otago's Biochemistry database "Transterm", which has genomic data on 40,000 species. Academic reputation In the 2024 Aggregate Ranking of Top Universities, which measures aggregate performance across the QS, THE and ARWU rankings, the university attained a position of #279 (2nd nationally). In the 2026 Quacquarelli Symonds World University Rankings (published 2025), the university attained a tied position of #197 (2nd nationally). In the Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2026 (published 2025), the university attained a position of #351-400 (2nd 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 #296 (2nd nationally). In the CWTS Leiden Ranking 2024, the university attained a position of #390 (2nd nationally). ==Student life==
Student life
O-Week 'O-Week' or Orientation Week is the Otago equivalent of Freshers' Week. New students are most commonly known by their seniors as 'freshers' or simply as 'first-years'. O-week is organised by the Otago University Students' Association and involves competitions such as 'Fresher of the Year' whereby several students volunteer to carry out a series of tasks throughout the week before being voted to win. Other competitions include that of different faculties facing off with each other. The OUSA also organises events each night including various concerts, a comedy night, hypnotist plus bigger events at Forsyth Barr Stadium. Typically there is a Highlanders rugby game scheduled during the week. Local bars organise events also with a range of live music and promotional deals. Historically events have included the Cookathon and a Miss O-Week competition hosted by The Outback. The Cookathon was held by a local pub (the Cook) with the premise that your first drink costs you about $20 which gives you a t-shirt, three meal vouchers and reduced price on drinks then you spend the rest of the day binge drinking and 'telephoning' the occasional jug with mates. ;Traditions Each year the first years are encouraged to attend the toga parade and party dressed in white sheets wrapped as togas. Retailers called for an end of the parade after property damage and disorder during the 2009 event. However, the OUSA took it upon themselves to reintroduce this tradition, with a festival like event taking place at the stadium. 2012 Toga Party saw an unofficial world record. A clocktower race also occurs, in the style of Chariots of Fire. Students must race round the tower and attached building, beginning on the first chime of the clock at noon and completing before the chimes cease. Unlike Chariots of Fire, the task is possible with a couple of students completing each year. Behavioural issues Student behaviour is a major concern for both the university administration and Dunedin residents in general. Concerns over student behaviour prompted the university to introduce a Code of Conduct (CoC) which its students must abide by in 2007. The introduction of the CoC was accompanied by the establishment of the dedicated 'Campus Watch' security force to keep tabs on crime and anti-social behaviour on campus and in the student neighbourhoods nearby. Campus Watch reports directly to the university's Proctor. ;Riots Riots took place in 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009 related to events surrounding the Undie 500 car rally organised by students from Canterbury University. Other student social events during the year such as the Toga Parade and the Hyde Street Keg Race are also notable for attracting police attention, but not to the scale of the Undie riots. In 2012 there were 80 people treated by emergency services and 15 arrests by police after the Hyde Street party went out of control. ;Protest Otago students are notable for protesting over contentious political issues in nearly every decade. In the 1960s students at Otago who were involved with the Progressive Youth Movement led protests against the Vietnam War. In the 1960s mixed flatting (males and females were prohibited from sharing housing up to that time) was contested in various creative ways by Otago students. On 28 September 1993 Otago students protested against a fee increase at the University Registry (Clocktower Building), which ended in a violent clash with police. In the lead up to the 1996 general election students trying to stop a 25% fee increase occupied the University Registry (Clocktower Building) for over a week (which was followed by similar occupations at campuses around the country), fee increases were limited to 17%. Since 2004, the Otago University NORML club, led by Abe Gray, met weekly on the Otago campus to protest by smoking cannabis in defiance of New Zealand's cannabis laws. In 2008, several members were arrested and issued with trespass notices banning them from the Union Lawn. ==Student body==
Student body
Admissions Statistics ==Notable people==
Notable people
Chancellors The following is a list of chancellors of the University of Otago. The following is a list of vice-chancellors of the university. FacultyMuriel Bell, nutritionist and medical researcher • Agnes Blackie, first female physics academic • Robert J. T. Bell, mathematician • Noel Benson, geologist • Marianne Bielschowsky, biochemist • Carolyn Burns, Marsden Medal winning zoologist • Jennie Connor Medicine • Alice Copping, nutritionist • Alison Cree, herpetologist • Marie Crowe, psychotherapy academic • John Crump, infectious diseases specialist • Michael Cullen, politician • Catherine Day, biochemist • Sarah Derrett, injury prevention specialist • John Carew Eccles, medical researcher • Norman Lowther Edson, biochemistry • Solomon Faine, microbiologist • J.N. Findlay, philosopher • Jim Flynn, intelligence researcher and political philosopher • Abe Gray, founder of the Whakamana Cannabis Museum, high-profile cannabis activist and protester for almost two decades • Alan Musgrave, philosopher of science • Lisa Matisoo-Smith, Professor of Biological Anthropology and Head of the Department of Anatomy • Pauline Norris, pharmacy professor • Patricia Priest, epidemiologist and professor of public health • Elaine Reese, psychology professor • Christina Riesselman, paleoceanographerBridget Robinson, Mackenzie Chair in Cancer Medicine • Angus Ross, professor of history • Abigail Smith, professor in marine sciences • David Skegg, epidemiologist • Rachael TaylorVirginia Toy, geology • Gillian Whalley, medical research Alumni (with residential college, if any, in parentheses where known) , 13th Premier • Arthur Henry Adams, journalist and writer • Barbara Anderson, novelist • Rui Maria de Araújo, Prime Minister of Timor-Leste • Annette Baier, moral philosopher • Rayyanah Barnawi, Saudi astronaut • Muriel Bell, nutritionist and medical researcher • David Benson-Pope, politician • W. D. Borrie, demographer • Christine Jensen Burke, mountain climber • Dame Silvia Cartwright, Governor GeneralBrian Christie, neuroscientist • Nathan Cohen, world champion and Olympic champion rower • John Coverdale, academic psychiatrist • John Crump, infectious diseases specialist • David Cunliffe (Carrington), politician • Helen Danesh-Meyer, ophthalmology academic • Thomas Davis, politician, diplomat and researcher • Glen Denham, Tall BlackDerek Denny-BrownSarah Derrett, injury prevention specialist • Archibald Durward FRSE, anatomist • Marc Ellis (University College), All Black , 39th Prime Minister • Bill English (Selwyn), 39th prime minister of New ZealandSolomon Faine, microbiologist • Janet Frame, writer • Ian Fraser, broadcaster • Caroline Freeman, first female graduate of the University of Otago • William Fyfe, geochemist • Jon Gadsby, comedian and actor • John Gallas, poet and educator • Abe Gray, founder of the Whakamana Cannabis Museum, high-profile cannabis activist and protester for almost two decades • David Kirk (Selwyn), All Black captain and businessman • Josh Kronfeld (Aquinas College), All Black • Chris Laidlaw, All Black and politician • Samuelu Laloniu, Permanent Representative of Tuvalu to the United Nations • Michael Laws, (Arana) politician, writer, broadcaster • Tania Lineham, science teacher, winner of the Prime Minister's Science Teacher Prize, 2015 • Bridie Lonie, artist and art academic • John Edward "Jack" Lovelock, athlete • Chris Mahony, World Bank professional, University of Oxford doctorate, athlete • Dee Mangin, David Braley Nancy Gordon Chair in Family Medicine at McMaster UniversityKamisese Mara (Knox), politician • Diana Martin, microbiologist in New Zealand (1942–2019) • Stella Maxwell, fashion model • Dame Judith Mayhew Jonas, businesswoman • Archibald McIndoe, plastic surgeon • Joseph William Mellor, chemist • James S. Milne, mathematician • Arnold Nordmeyer, politician • Christopher Norton, composer • Anton Oliver (University College), captain of the All BlacksMazlan Othman, astrophysicist, director of the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs , athlete, physician and 11th governor-generalLan Pham, politician and ecologist • Lord Porritt (Selwyn), Olympian, physician to the queen and governor generalArthur Prior, philosopher • Lauren Kim Roche, physician and author • Emily Siedeberg, first female medical graduate • Penny Simmonds, politician • John Staveley, haematologist and pathologist • Robert Stout (Aquinas), Prime Minister of New Zealand • Sulaiman Daud, politician • Sione Tapa, Tongan Minister of Health • Peter Tapsell, politician • Pobert H Wade LSE Professor • Jeremy Waldron, legal philosopher • Murray Webb, cricketer and caricaturist • Bridget Williams, publisher • Allan Wilson, molecular biologist Rhodes Scholars list of Rhodes Scholars: , athlete (College at Oxford in brackets)(Source: List of NZ Rhodes Scholars) ==See also==
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