Monash University: University Handbooks: Postgraduate Handbook 2002: Units indexed by faculty
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Introduction to the faculty

The Faculty of Business and Economics operates on the Berwick, Caulfield, Clayton, Gippsland and Peninsula campuses in Australia, the Monash Malaysia campus near Kuala Lumpur and the new campus near Johannesburg, South Africa, as well as in Sydney, Hong Kong and Singapore. It has approximately 13,000 students and offers a wide range of undergraduate degrees and diplomas, executive certificates, graduate certificates, graduate diplomas, postgraduate diplomas, masters degrees by research and by coursework and the doctor of philosophy degree. These courses are available through a range of flexible learning study methods, including off-campus distributed learning and Open Learning, as well as the more traditional on-campus study.
The mission of the faculty is to use its scale, scope and unique internal diversity to become an international leader in the pursuit, dissemination and analysis of knowledge, particularly in the disciplines of accounting, banking, business law, business statistics, econometrics, economics, electronic commerce, finance, international business and international trade, management, marketing, taxation and tourism. By the application of that knowledge, its staff and students will contribute to the economic, social and commercial development of Australia and other countries.
The term 'Faculty of Business and Economics' in the wider sense includes all students enrolled for degrees, diplomas and certificates offered by the faculty, and all staff (academic, administrative, technical and clerical) attached to the campuses which make up the faculty.
The faculty is a body established under university statute. It comprises members of the teaching staff and other persons as appointed by the university Council. The responsibility for making academic decisions in the faculty lies with the faculty board, which comprises heads of departments, faculty heads on the various campuses, appointed and elected members of the teaching staff, elected members of the general staff, student members (international, undergraduate and postgraduate), nominees of other faculties and the library. Except in certain matters on which it has power to act, the faculty board makes recommendations to the Education Committee and to the Academic Board and through the Academic Board to the Council of the university.
The faculty also has a number of committees, including an executive committee, undergraduate and graduate studies committees and committees for research, library, budgets, and equal opportunity and affirmative action. The dean, as chief executive officer of the faculty, provides academic leadership to the faculty, presides over meetings of the faculty board and its committees and exercises a general superintendence over the educational and administrative affairs of the faculty.
The director of administration of the faculty is responsible for the overall administration of the faculty, including matters relating to university statutes, regulations, the provision of advice on policy to faculty board and its related committees, student services, management of the faculty's financial, technical and resource activities and personnel matters of the faculty.

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