Delegations Policy
Effective 1 January 2025
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To provide for the establishment and exercise of delegations of authority in accordance with the听听(NSW) (UNSW Act).
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This policy applies to members of Council and continuing and fixed-term employees of the University of New South Wales (the University). This policy does not apply to the University鈥檚 controlled entities or to their staff, as these entities have their own frameworks to authorise decisions and signatories of documents. Nothing in this policy invalidates past acts performed by delegates in conformity with delegations in place at the time.
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This policy provides:
- principles for delegation of the University Council鈥檚 (Council鈥檚) functions under the UNSW Act
- principles for exercising an authorisation under other legislation (including where other legislation prescribes that certain functions must be performed by specific officers of the University (for example, the听听(NSW) permits the signing of deeds by the Vice-Chancellor or any other member of staff of the University authorised by the Vice-Chancellor to sign deeds without the use of the University seal)
- procedures including requirements for establishing, changing and exercising these delegations and authorisations, and
- schedules stating Council鈥檚 delegations and other authorisations for areas of the University鈥檚 activities.
This policy is consistent with section 16 of the UNSW Act, which authorises the Council to delegate any of its functions (except the power of delegation) to any of its members, or to any committee or officer of the University.
For the purposes of this policy and its schedules, a reference to 鈥榙elegation鈥 covers delegations under the UNSW Act and any authorisations or delegations in accordance with other legislation.听 The schedules will specify the source of authority for a particular delegation if it is not a delegation of authority under the UNSW Act.
Where a delegate is authorised under this policy to sign a document in the form of a deed, this authorisation is provided by the Vice-Chancellor under section 50(3) of the听听(NSW).
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Principles and objectives
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1.1. Delegations under the UNSW Act state positions or committees to which Council delegates the authority to perform a function or make a decision on its behalf. These delegations are used to authorise:
- functions and decisions that Council requires to be performed or made by staff at an appropriate level of seniority or with specialist knowledge, to ensure sound governance, good management and mitigate risk, and
- any decision about a staff member, student or member of the public.
1.2. Other legislation applicable to the University and University enterprise agreements may also authorise officers or committees of the University to make certain decisions or prescribe that certain officers within the University must perform specific functions.
1.3. Decision authorities in policy documents will be consistent with the delegations in the schedules to this policy. Where a decision authority is inconsistent with a delegation:
- the delegation prevails to the extent of the inconsistency, and
- the responsible officer for the policy will submit a minor change to the policy document for approval, to make it consistent with the delegation.
1.4. Council may exercise any of its functions that it has delegated unless a delegate has already exercised their delegation in the matter.
1.5. The Vice-Chancellor may exercise any functions that the Vice-Chancellor has authorised under legislation, unless the officer has already exercised their authorisation in the matter.
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2.1. Council reserves all functions to itself, except to the extent that functions are expressly delegated under this policy.
2.2. Council specifically reserves to itself the following functions:
a)听听听听 Any function or matter specified in another University听by-law, rule, policy or other instrument that must be exercised or approved by Council.
b)听听听听 Approve the annual budget of the University and its strategic plan (as per section 15(1B)(d) of the UNSW Act).
c)听听听听 Appoint or terminate the appointment of the Vice-Chancellor (as per sections 12(1) and 12(2) of the UNSW Act).
d)听听听听 Establish or disestablish a faculty (as per clause 60 of the University鈥檚 By-law).
e)听听听听 Name or rename a building or faculty.
f)听听听听听听 Establish, or approve participation in, a body corporate or other entity or structure听(such as a partnership, trust or joint venture) in which the University听has a听controlling interest.
g)听听听听 Establish a policy, standard or procedure for commercial activities of the University (as per section 20B of the UNSW Act).
h)听听听听 Establish a policy, standard or procedure that applies only to Council members in their capacity as Council members.
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3.1. The exercise of certain delegations must be reported to the next meeting of the Council. This reporting obligation is stated in the Conditions of exercise column in the schedules of delegations and is recorded at clause 1.17 of the Procedure.
3.2. The Vice-Chancellor, University Secretary and Chief Assurance & Legal Officer must endorse any change to this policy, its supporting procedure or schedules, other than a minor or administrative change as defined in the Policy Framework Policy, before it is submitted to Council for approval.
3.3. Any change to the title of a delegate position or committee title in the schedules to this policy can only be approved by Council.
3.4. The President of the Academic Board must endorse changes to schedule 1 Academic delegations before they are submitted for approval.
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Effective:听1 January 2025听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听听听 听 听 Responsible:听Chief Assurance and Legal Officer听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听听听 Lead:听Director of Governance and University Secretary |
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1.1. A delegation cannot be exercised by:
a)听听听听 a less senior position or lower committee than those named in the delegation, or
b)听听听听 a more senior position that is not in the delegate鈥檚 line management.
1.2. A delegation may include conditions, and a delegate must ensure those conditions are met before exercising the delegation.
1.3. A delegate cannot subdelegate their delegated function or decision to another position.
1.4. Someone who holds a position higher in the line management to a position named in a delegation can exercise the delegation (provided the delegate has not already exercised it in the matter under consideration) in circumstances such as where:
a)听听听听 the delegate is absent
b)听听听听 the delegate position has been disestablished or its title has changed
c)听听听听 the matter involves unusual factors and the delegate escalates it to the higher manager, or the higher manager steps in to exercise the delegation themselves, or
d)听听听听 the decision is about the delegate鈥檚 own employment, remuneration or otherwise would be a perceived, potential or actual conflict of interest.
1.5. Where a delegation is to a committee, the delegation is to the committee acting as a committee in accordance with its terms of reference.
Vice-Chancellor
1.6. The Vice-Chancellor may exercise any delegation stated in this procedure, except delegations made to:
a)听听听听 a member of Council
b)听听听听 a committee of Council,
c)听听听听 the President of the Academic Board, or
d)听听听听 the Academic Board or a committee of the Academic Board.
1.7. When the Vice-Chancellor is absent or unable to exercise a delegation, and no-one is appointed as acting Vice-Chancellor, the Chancellor may exercise any delegation in accordance with clause 1.6.
Signing and recording
1.8. A delegate can sign any document necessary to perform their role. However, the delegate cannot sign any document that has been specifically delegated in the schedules to someone else to sign. 听
1.9. Where a delegate exercises a delegation, they must ensure the exercise is recorded in writing, either in a hard copy file or in electronic form in a university system of record.
1.10. Where a delegate鈥檚 signature is required, the following are considered satisfactory substitutes for a written signature:
- an email from the delegate鈥檚 university email address, that states the approval and the matter for which the approval is given, or
- an approval recorded as an action in a university recordkeeping system that is used to manage the type of matter for which the approval is given.
1.11. Where a delegation is to more than one position and authorises a primary delegate to decide which position will exercise the delegation, the decision must be recorded in writing and retained by the primary delegate and produced on request for auditing purposes.
Complying with laws and policies
1.12. In exercising a delegation, a delegate must comply with applicable:
a)听听听听 laws, including (but not limited to) the UNSW Act, University of New South Wales By-law 2005, the University of New South Wales Rules, and the Government Sector Finance Act 2018 (NSW)
b)听听听听 industrial awards or agreements (such as the University鈥檚 enterprise agreements), and
c)听听听听 codes, policies, standards and procedures of the University.
1.13. A delegate may only exercise a delegation:
a)听听听听 in the University鈥檚 best interest, and
b)听听听听 for the purposes of university business within their area of accountability (unless the delegation specifies that it is intended to be exercised more widely).
1.14. The Conflict of Interest Disclosure and Management Policy (鈥淐OI policy鈥) and procedure apply to a delegate鈥檚 exercise of a delegation.
1.15. Where a delegate has an actual, perceived or potential conflict of interest in exercising a delegation, they must disclose it and it must be managed in accordance with the COI policy and procedure.
1.16. Delegations to a position are to the person or persons who currently hold(s) the position named in the delegation. Accordingly:
a)听 听 听Where two staff members job-share a position, either may exercise a delegation held by the position if the other has not already exercised it in the matter.
b)听听听听 A staff member who is appointed to act in a position temporarily may exercise a delegation held by that position, unless the appointment to act specifies otherwise.
Reporting requirements
1.17. The exercise of any of the following delegations will be reported by the delegate to the next meeting of the Council:
- 1.34 establishing an award program or specialisation, and
- 9.1 establishing a policy.
Signing agreements
1.18. If the exercise of a delegation involves a delegate signing an agreement, before exercising that delegation, the delegate must be satisfied that:
- if the agreement involves a Deed of Release, that Deed has been reviewed by a lawyer in the Legal & Compliance team; or
- in any other case, the agreement has been assessed against a risk matrix approved by the Legal & Compliance team (in consultation with the relevant stakeholders) and the outcome of that assessment is that the agreement:
听 听 听i.听听听听听听听听听听听 does not need a legal review; or
听 听 听ii.听听听听听听听听听听听 needs a legal review, and a lawyer in the Legal & Compliance team has reviewed the agreement.
The risk matrix will take into account factors such as whether the agreement is in the form of a template approved by the Legal & Compliance team.
Approved alternates for direct reports of the Vice-Chancellor
1.19. Direct reports of the Vice-Chancellor act for other members in their absence on urgent matters, as indicated below.
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Member
Alternate
VC
Provost
Provost
DVC Academic Quality
DVC Academic Quality
DVC Research and Enterprise
DVC Education and Student Experience
DVC Global
DVC Global
DVC Education and Student Experience
DVC Indigenous
Provost
DVC Research and Enterprise
DVC Academic Quality
Chief Assurance & Legal Officer
VP Societal Impact, Equity and Engagement
VP Operations
Chief Assurance & Legal Officer
VP Societal Impact, Equity and Engagement
DVC Indigenous
President of the Academic Board
Deputy-President of the Academic Board
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2.1. Where a delegation lists two or more delegates, any one of the delegates can exercise the delegation, unless:
a)听听听听 the delegation or its conditions of exercise specify that more than one of the delegates must exercise it together, or
b)听听听听 another of the delegates listed has already exercised the delegation in the matter.
2.2. A delegation to approve includes the authority to suspend, change and revoke the approval.
2.3. A delegation to decide a matter includes the authority to approve, waive, exempt and refund in the same matter.
2.4. A delegation to establish something includes the authority to create, approve, change or disestablish it.
2.5. A delegation to appoint includes:
a)听听听听 where the appointment is to a staff position, and the appointee is temporarily absent, the authority to appoint someone to act in the position or office temporarily, or
b)听听听听 where the appointment is to represent the University on the board or other governing body of a controlled entity or other external organisation, the authority to revoke the appointment.
2.6. A delegation to do something includes anything incidental or necessary to give effect to that delegation
2.7. Where a major initiative or activity overlaps multiple delegations (eg schools, faculties, divisions, education, research etc), the project lead will collaborate with delegates and the Director of Governance to enable effective decision making.
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Effective:听1 January 2025听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听听听 听 听 Responsible:听Chief Assurance and Legal Officer听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听听听 Lead:听Director of Governance and University Secretary |
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The following University officers are authorised to maintain and change the procedure sections of this policy in accordance with the Policy Framework Policy:
- Director of Governance and University Secretary.
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This policy is intended to ensure that the University complies with the:
- University of New South Wales Act 1989 (NSW).
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The definitions of terms, abbreviations, acronyms, initialisms and symbols stated below apply both to this policy and to the attached schedules of delegations.
Where a delegation, in the schedules of delegations that support this policy, identifies a relevant policy document, readers should consult that policy document for definitions of terms used in the delegation other than terms defined below.
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- A - E
- F - N
- O - Z
Academic staff
Staff (on an ongoing or fixed-term employment contract) in the position of Vice Chancellor and President, Provost, Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Pro-Vice Chancellor, Dean or Head of School, or in the following classifications: Level A (Associate Lecturer), Level B (Lecturer), Level C (Senior Lecturer), Level D (Associate Professor), Level E (Professor).
Affix
In relation to the University鈥檚 seal, add the seal to a document and sign the sealed document to attest that the seal has been added to it.
Agreement
Is a document between two or more parties, including a memorandum of understanding (binding and non-binding), deed and a non-disclosure agreement.
AQF
Australian Qualifications Framework
Area of accountability
The organisational unit or group of units, or area of the University鈥檚 activities, for or within which a delegate is responsible according to their position description or employment contract.
Associate dean
Any position of which the position title includes the phrase "Associate Dean".
CALO
Chief Assurance and Legal Officer. References to the 鈥淐hief Legal Officer鈥 are to the role when they are acting solely in their capacity as a solicitor.
Certified Technology Products List
The University鈥檚 list of ICT products and services approved for acquisition.
CFO
Chief Financial Officer.
Chief officer
Any of the positions CALO, CFO, CIO, CPO, CPropO.
CPO
Chief People Officer.
CIO
Chief Information Officer.
CPropO
Chief Property Officer.
Committee
A committee or board of the University.
Course authority
Any position of which the position title includes the word or phrase 鈥渓ecturer鈥, 鈥渟enior lecturer鈥, 鈥渁ssociate professor鈥 or 鈥減rofessor鈥 and which has overarching responsibility for all aspects of a course.
Dean of faculty
Any position starting with the word 鈥淒ean鈥 that is the peak leader of a faculty; the Rector of the UNSW University College at the Australian Defence Force Academy, Canberra is also a dean.
Dean of Graduate Research
Pro Vice-Chancellor Research Training and Dean of Graduate Research.
Deed of release
Includes any:
(a)听听听 agreement or deed of release of obligations, or
(b)听听听 deed of release, discharge or settlement
that documents the satisfaction, cessation or settlement of any claim, dispute or litigation or any document, however described or titled, of corresponding or similar effect to (a) or (b) above.
Delegate
A position or committee named in a delegation and authorised by the delegation to perform a function or make a decision.
Delegation
Has the meaning stated in clause 1.1 of the Delegations Policy.
Deputy dean
Any position of which the position title includes the phrase "Deputy Dean".
DVC
Any position of which the position title includes the phrase "Deputy Vice-Chancellor".
Director of Governance
Director of Governance and University Secretary.
Divisional operations director
Any position of which the position title includes the word 鈥淒irector鈥, and which has overall responsibility for managing budget and resources for a division.
Faculty executive director
Any position of which the position title includes the phrase "Faculty Executive Director", or in the case of UNSW Business, 鈥淕eneral Manager鈥.
Head of school
Any position of which the position title includes the phrase "Head of School".
HDR
Higher degree research.
Hiring manager
Any position of which the title includes one of the following words or phrases, where the holder of the position either (if appointing to a fixed-term or ongoing position, or to a nomination) chairs the selection panel to recommend which candidate is preferred or (if appointing a casual staff member) manages the appointment: "Advisor", "Chief", "Coordinator", 鈥淐ounsel鈥, "Dean", "Director", 鈥淓ngineer鈥, 鈥淗ead鈥, "Lead", "Lecturer", "Librarian", "Manager鈥, "Officer", 鈥淧rincipal鈥, "Professor", "Provost", 听鈥淭echnician鈥, 鈥淪ecretary鈥, 鈥淪upervisor鈥, "Vice-Chancellor", "Vice-President".
ICT
Information and communication technology
ICT products and services
These include software, IT hardware, communications equipment and infrastructure, cloud services such as software or hardware as a service and professional or consulting services engaged to help the University meet its ICT needs.
In-kind expenditure
Contributions of University resources instead of financial expenditure. Resources include, for example, assets, equipment, goods, services, labour and access to equipment and facilities.
Line management
The positions to which a given position reports: the position鈥檚 direct supervisor position, the supervisor of that higher position, and so on. A dean is in the line management of all staff in their faculty; a deputy vice-chancellor or vice-president is in the line management of all staff in their division; and the Vice-Chancellor is in the line management of all staff of the University.
NIDA
National Institute of Dramatic Art
Nomination
A fixed-term appointment to an academic or professional staff position.
Policy lead
Any position of which the title includes one of the following words or phrases and which is nominated by the responsible officer for a code or policy, to lead development, review and monitor the effectiveness of the policy, or is authorised by a policy to maintain and approve a supporting standard, procedure or university-wide instruction:
"Chief", 鈥淐ounsel鈥, "Dean", "Director", 鈥淗ead鈥, "Lead", "Librarian", "Manager鈥, 鈥淧rincipal鈥, "Provost",听 鈥淩egistrar鈥, 鈥淭echnician鈥, 鈥淪ecretary鈥, "Vice-Chancellor", "Vice-President".
Portfolio
The division or organisational unit, or set of divisions and/or organisational units, for which a DVC or VP is responsible and which report to them.
Position
A formal work role named in a staff member鈥檚 contract of employment, with a position title and position description.
Professional staff
Staff in professional, general or technical positions who are not academic staff of the University.
Program authority
Any position of which the position title includes the word or phrase 鈥渓ecturer鈥, 鈥渟enior lecturer鈥, 鈥渁ssociate professor鈥 or 鈥減rofessor鈥, and which has overarching responsibility for all aspects of a program.
PVC
Any position of which the position title includes the phrase "Pro Vice-Chancellor".
Recordkeeping systems
Information and communication technology systems assessed by Records and Archives as suitable for keeping university records. These systems are listed on the .
Rector, Canberra听
Rector of 91成人版抖音at the Australian Defence Force Academy.
Registrar
Academic Registrar and Director of Student Services.
SHARP
Strategic Hires and Retention Pathways.
Statutory payment
Taxes, dues and payments that are required by law to be paid by either State or Federal Government, statutory entities of local authorities, such as corporation tax, payroll tax, goods and services tax, superannuation and pay as you go withholding.
Supervisor
Any position of which the title includes one of the following words or phrases, and to which another position reports for employment purposes: "Advisor", "Dean", "Director", "Chief", "Coordinator", 鈥淐ounsel鈥, "Dean", 鈥淓ngineer鈥, 鈥淗ead鈥, "Librarian", "Manager', "Officer", "Professor", "Provost", "Lecturer", "Lead", 鈥淧rincipal鈥, 鈥淪olicitor鈥, 鈥淭echnician鈥, 鈥淪ecretary鈥, 鈥淪upervisor鈥, "Vice-Chancellor", "Vice-President".
TFR
Total fixed remuneration.
UNSW Act
University of New South Wales Act 1989 (NSW).
VC
Vice-Chancellor and President.
VP
Any position of which the title includes the phrase 鈥淰ice-President鈥.
Contents
Policy Lead
James Fitzgibbon听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 Director of Governance and University Secretary
Effective:听1 January 2025听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听听听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听Responsible:听Interim VP, Transformation, Planning and Assurance听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听听听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 Lead:听Director of Governance and University Secretary |