This is the response from Charles Sturt University to this question:
Charles Sturt University (CSU) is one of 38 publicly funded universities in Australia with international recognition for all its schools. CSU is fully accredited under Australian legislation and it is a member of all the relevant National and Commonwealth associations of universities. The University is registered, and may lawfully operate as a University in Australia and deliver courses of study inside and outside Australia, in accordance with Section 16-15 of the Higher Education Support Act 2003 of the Commonwealth of Australia. For further details please view www.csu.edu.au/division/vcoffice/oca/governance/registrations.htm .
Checking the AU legislation website, I found it all to be true. Yes, it is accredited.
Charles Sturt University was created in 1989.
The motto of Charles Sturt University is 'For the public good'.
Charles Sturt University Study Centres was created in 2001.
Charles Sturt was not an Australian Gallipoli leader. He was one of Australia's greatest explorers, following the course of the Murrumbidgee and Murray Rivers, and opening up the southeastern corner of the continent for settlement and river transportation. And yes, it is after the explorer Charles Sturt that the Charles Sturt University is named.
Charles Sturt University has campuses in NSW, ACT and VIC. The campuses are predominantly located in regional centres such as Albury, Dubbo and Wagga Wagga.
Charles Sturt's legacy of exploration is found in the naming of such places as:Sturt Stony DesertSturt River (South Australia)Charles Sturt University (NSW)Sturt's name also lives on in the floral emblem of South Australia, the Sturt Desert Pea, and the floral emblem of the Northern Territory, Sturt's Desert Rose.
charles sturt was a explorer
Charles Napier Sturt.
Carcoar Primary, Blayney High then university at Charles Sturt and University of Sydney.
Charles Sturt's occupation was Surveyor-General.
City of Charles Sturt was created in 1997.
Sturt Plain is named after the English explorer, Captain Charles Sturt, who led expeditions into the Australian interior in the 19th century, including the area where the plain is located.