In a significant leadership transition spanning continents, Professor Colin Grant, currently Deputy Vice-Chancellor Global at the University of New South Wales (UNSW Sydney), has been appointed as the next Vice-Chancellor and Chief Executive Officer of Aston University in Birmingham, UK. The announcement, made on April 27, 2026, marks another chapter in the growing pattern of high-level academic mobility between Australia and the United Kingdom, highlighting the interconnected nature of global higher education.
This move comes as Aston seeks to build on its recent successes under outgoing Vice-Chancellor Professor Aleks Subic, who is departing in April 2026 to lead Torrens University Australia. Professor Grant is set to take up his new role on August 10, 2026, bringing his extensive experience in international strategy and partnerships to steer Aston through its ambitious 2030 Strategy.
Understanding the Appointment: A Cross-Hemisphere Leadership Shift
The appointment was confirmed by Aston University's Council, with Pro-Chancellor and Chair Dr Matthew Crummack praising Grant's 'wealth of experience from some of the most prestigious universities across the world' and his track record in 'delivering institutional growth, partnerships, research excellence and strong student outcomes.' Grant himself expressed enthusiasm for joining 'an incredible university with an exceptional heritage in knowledge exchange, outstanding student experience and deeply relevant research.'
For Australian higher education stakeholders, this development underscores the global appeal of leaders from Group of Eight (Go8) institutions like UNSW, ranked 20th in the QS World University Rankings 2026. Aston, positioned at =395 globally but celebrated for its top 5% standing, second place in UK social mobility (HEPI 2025), and triple Gold in the Teaching Excellence Framework, represents a dynamic opportunity for Grant to apply Australian models of innovation and employability.
Who is Professor Colin Grant? A Global Career Profile
Born in Scotland, Professor Grant holds a BA and PhD, is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (FHEA) and the Royal Society for Arts (FRSA). His academic roots lie in literature, political science, psychology, epistemology, and communication theory, with early career stages including a lectureship at Heriot-Watt University, a DAAD Post-Doctoral Fellowship in Germany, and an Associate Professorship at Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ).
Grant's executive ascent began at the University of Surrey, where he progressed from Head of Department to Dean and inaugural Pro-Vice-Chancellor for International Relations. He then served as inaugural Vice-President International at the University of Southampton and Vice-Principal International at Queen Mary University of London, chairing the Russell Group International Forum and leading Universities UK efforts in Latin America.
Since June 2023 at UNSW, Grant has overseen global operations, including refreshed strategies, new overseas campuses like the forthcoming Bengaluru site opening in August 2026, and partnerships in India, Indonesia, and the Pacific. His portfolio includes bilateral research consortia across UK, Brazil, USA, Australia, India, China, and Japan, plus accelerators for startup mobility and global policy institutes.
Grant's Impact at UNSW: Shaping Australia's Global Higher Ed Footprint
Under Grant's leadership, UNSW has accelerated its internationalisation. Key achievements include the launch of Group Ventures to expand education access worldwide, a refreshed global strategy emphasising underserved regions, and initiatives like the global indigenous knowledge exchange for research and community relationships. He has fostered collaborations such as with Xi'an Jiaotong University and advanced the UK-Australia Advanced Skills Alliance.
These efforts align with UNSW's climb to QS #20, with 39 subjects in the global top 100, particularly strong in engineering and technology. Grant's focus on sustainable partnerships has positioned UNSW as a leader in impactful global engagement, from AI accelerators to health research in the Pacific.
His departure raises questions about succession at UNSW, a critical Go8 player driving Australia's research and innovation agenda. While no official response has been issued yet, the university's robust leadership bench—evident in recent appointments—suggests continuity in its global ambitions.
Aston University's Context: Strengths and Strategic Horizons
Aston, a post-1992 UK university, excels in applied research and enterprise. Its 2024-25 accounts show a £4.2 million surplus amid inflation pressures, following a £1.3 million funding repayment over apprenticeships. Recent investments include a £40 million campus renovation and Power Skills Festival to boost employability.
The 2030 Strategy, launched in 2023, aims to position Aston as a leader in science, technology, and innovation for socio-economic transformation in Birmingham. Five strategic objectives guide this: extending reach beyond campus, growing influence regionally and internationally, with pillars like the Business Innovation Precinct, Aston Global Hub network, breakthrough research in Health & Life Sciences, Engineering & Innovation, and Business & Social Sciences, and sector-leading student employability (top 20 UK graduate salaries, LEO 2025).
Aston's 2030 Strategy detailsWhy Grant? A Perfect Alignment of Expertise and Vision
Grant's transnational experience bridges UK and Australian systems. Aston's recent VCs—Subic (ex-UWA) and Cameron (ex-UWA)—illustrate a pattern of Australian leadership infusion, bringing research intensity and industry focus. Grant's global consortia and campus ventures directly support Aston's expansion goals, such as offshore hubs and digital transformation.
His passion for 'transformational power of education, research and innovation for the greater good through partnerships' echoes Aston's civic mission, including the Civic Agreement 2030 with seven pledges for Birmingham's economy.
Implications for UNSW and Australian Higher Education
UNSW's global portfolio, including India campus and Pacific initiatives, will require seamless transition. Grant's contributions have diversified partnerships beyond traditional markets, enhancing UNSW's resilience amid visa changes and geopolitical shifts.
For Australia, this highlights leadership 'brain circulation'—Subic's return balances Grant's departure. Go8 universities increasingly seek global talent, with VCs averaging multimillion salaries reflecting the role's demands.
- Strengthens AU-UK ties via alumni networks and research alliances.
- Potential for reciprocal opportunities in executive roles.
- Emphasises need for domestic talent pipelines in international strategy.
Trends in Australia-UK Vice-Chancellor Mobility
Exchanges are common: Subic (AU to UK back to AU), Cameron (AU to UK to RMIT). UK VCs like Greg Parry faced AU visa hurdles, but post-Brexit/AUKUS, collaborations deepen in research and skills exchange.
Challenges include remuneration debates—UK VCs earn ~£300k+, AU ~AUD1m+—and funding pressures. Yet, mobility fosters best practices, e.g. Australia's employability focus aiding UK social mobility goals.
Times Higher Education coverageStakeholder Reactions and Sector Perspectives
Early reactions praise Grant's fit: 'clear vision aligning with institutional ambitions' (Crummack). No UNSW statement yet, but insiders note his foundational global refresh. Academics view it positively for cross-pollination, though lament short UNSW tenure.
In Australia, it spotlights Go8 leadership demands amid enrollment cliffs and funding squeezes.
Future Outlook: Grant's Agenda at Aston and Legacy Down Under
At Aston, expect accelerated Global Hubs, precinct development, and research translation. For UNSW, sustained momentum in Bengaluru campus and alliances.
This appointment exemplifies higher ed's borderless talent pool, benefiting students via enhanced opportunities.
What It Means for Careers in Higher Education Leadership
Aspiring executives note Grant's path: blend academic prowess with strategic intl roles. Australia offers robust platforms for global impact.
Explore vice-chancellor roles and prepare via networks like Go8.
Photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash
