鶹ýlaunches search to re-establish 鶹ýMānoa chancellor position

University of 鶹ý at Mānoa
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University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
Posted: Feb 25, 2026

The University of Hawaiʻi has officially launched a national search to select the next chancellor of 鶹ýMānoa, re-establishing the position to ensure dedicated executive leadership for the flagship campus of the 鶹ý10-campus system, the state’s only public higher education system.

Currently, the 鶹ýpresident also holds 鶹ýMānoa chancellor responsibilities, while academic affairs, research, enrollment management and student affairs are led by the 鶹ýMānoa provost. Splitting the roles was discussed by the Board of Regents during the 2024 presidential search. 鶹ýMānoa is the only 鶹ýcampus without a dedicated chancellor. While this hybrid structure has provided continuity, it does not offer Mānoa the same level of focused executive representation and advocacy as the other 鶹ýcampuses.

In August 2025, the National Center for Higher Education Management Systems (NCHEMS) released  a report evaluating the 鶹ýSystem Structure that recommended separating the two positions. The Board of Regents subsequently formed a permitted interaction group to study the issue and, in December, voted to accept the recommendation and re-establish the 鶹ýMānoa chancellor position.

“We initially anticipated launching a fall 2026 search. However, it has become clear that moving forward now is in the best interests of both 鶹ýMānoa and the 10-campus system—a decision unanimously supported by the Mānoa Faculty Senate,” said 鶹ýPresident Wendy Hensel in a February 25 email to the 鶹ýMānoa campus. “Not only is this a critically important leadership position, but the challenging federal landscape, reorganization conversations and changes in AI and other technology make clear this is an inflection moment for the campus and the system. ” 

Hensel said the search will be inclusive, transparent and engaged and announced that David Karl, 鶹ýMānoa director of the Daniel K. Inouye Center for Microbial Oceanography: Research and Education, and former 鶹ýregent Jan Sullivan, executive vice president and chief operating officer of Oceanit, have agreed to serve as co-chairs of the search committee.

Next steps

Each step in the search will be communicated widely as they occur and include:

  • Formation of a representative search advisory committee
  • Open nomination and application period (approximately one month)
  • Campus visits by finalists, including open forums and stakeholder meetings, before the end of the spring semester
  • Committee recommendation of finalists to the 鶹ýpresident
  • 鶹ýpresident recommendation of the selected candidate to the Board of Regents for consideration and approval
  • Anticipated start date: fall 2026

Chancellor responsibilities

The chancellor will serve as the chief executive officer of 鶹ýMānoa, reporting to the 鶹ýpresident and serving on the president’s senior leadership team. The chancellor will oversee a budget exceeding $800 million and more than 5,000 employees and will provide strategic leadership across academic affairs, research, student success, enrollment and administrative operations in collaboration with the provost and executive team. 

The chancellor is also expected to advance 鶹ýMānoa’s mission as Hawaiʻi’s flagship research university while upholding its responsibility to the Native Hawaiian community, language and culture, and strengthening its connections across Hawaiʻi, the Pacific and Asia.

鶹ýMānoa
Founded in 1907, 鶹ýMānoa is a globally recognized center of learning and research with a kuleana to serve the people and places of Hawaiʻi and its neighbors across the Pacific and Asia. The university cultivates creative and innovative leaders who mālama people, places and ways of knowing to sustain and transform Hawaiʻi and the world. As a Land-, Sea-, Space- and Sun-Grant university, 鶹ýMānoa serves more than 20,000 students across 14 colleges and schools, offering 97 bachelor’s, 86 master’s and 56 doctoral degree programs.

鶹ýMānoa is a Carnegie R1 (very high research activity) institution and is internationally recognized as one of the nation’s top research universities, with research and development awards totaling $570 million in fiscal year 2024–25. The campus maintains particular strengths in ocean and earth sciences, astronomy and Asia-Pacific studies and plays a central role in Hawaiʻi’s economic development, civic engagement and community outreach through its commitment to teaching, scholarship and service.