Showing 536 results

authority records
Ward, Frederick
Person · 1899 - 1990

Fred Ward came to the Australian National University in 1952 after securing a contract to design furniture for University House. In 1954 he was appointed as ANU Designer and formed the ANU Design Unit where furniture was designed for other ANU buildings. He left the ANU in 1960 to establish a private practice.

Ballard, John Addison
Person · 1930 - 2014

John Addison Ballard's initial research was in Africa in the 1960s. He was a Research Fellow in the Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University (ANU), examining policy-making in Papua New Guinea during the period of decolonisation, 1972-1980; Professor of Administrative Studies at the University of Papua New Guinea; Appointment in the Department of Political Science in The Faculties, 1980-1995; Convenor of the Graduate Program in Political Science and International Relations; Co-convenor of a program on sexualities and culture at the Humanities Research Centre, 1993; Visiting Fellow, Graduate Research School, 1996-; Visiting Fellow, Gender Relations Centre, 2004-2014.

Carswell, Phillip James
Person · 1953 - 2024

Phil Carswell trained as a science teacher at the State College of Victoria, Rusden 1972-1976 and was a member of the National Executive of the Australian Union of Students. He taught at Victorian technical schools from 1976 to 1982 and was also a member of the State Executive of the Victorian Technical Teachers' Union and their editor from 1983 to 1984. He was a founding member and inaugural President of the Victorian AIDS Council, formed in 1983. In 1984 he was appointed by the Health Commission of Victoria as a liaison officer between the Commission and the gay community on AIDS-related issues and participated in the organisation of the 1st National AIDS Conference held in Melbourne in November 1985. He visited the United States of America and Europe in 1986 and produced a report on AIDS education resources and collected an extensive range of materials. He represented the Victorian AIDS Council on the Australian Federation of AIDS Organisations Council and was appointed as a gay community representative to the National Advisory Council on AIDS (and its successor, the Australian National Council on AIDS). He was an inaugural trustee of the AIDS Trust of Australia in 1987 and convenor of the project to create the AIDS Memorial Quilt in Victoria. In 1993 he left the Victorian Department of Health and Community Services where he headed the AIDS/STD Unit, to take up the position as Manager, HIV/AIDS and Sexual Health Section in the Queensland Department of Health in Brisbane.

Reid, Anthony John Stanhope
Person · 1939 - 2025

Professor Anthony Reid was a New Zealand-born historian of Southeast Asia. He received a PhD from Cambridge University for research examining the power struggles in northern Sumatra, Indonesia, in the late 19th century and he extended this study into a book 'The Blood of the People' on the national and social revolutions in that region 1945-49. He is best known for his two volume book 'The Age of Commerce', developed during his time at the Australian National University in Canberra. His later work includes a return to Sumatra where he strongly advocated a historical basis for the separate identity of Aceh. Reid was Professor of Southeast Asia History at University of Malaya (1965–70), then Fellow (1970-74), Senior Fellow (1974-88) and Professor of Southeast Asian History (1989-99) at the Australian National University. He was the founding director of the Southeast Asia Center, University of California, Los Angeles, 1999–2002, and then founding director of the Asia Research Institute at the National University of Singapore 2002-07 and Professor of Southeast Asian History and Research Leader there 2007-09. He was the founding convenor of the Asian Studies Association of Australia 1975-76 and President 1996-98. Professor Reid was an Emeritus Professor at the Australian National University.

Ferguson, Martin
Person · 1953 -

Martin Ferguson's long career has included roles as a trade unionist and a politician. He was General Secretary of the Miscellaneous Workers Union from 1984 to 1990, President of the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) from 1990 to 1996 and held the federal seat of Batman for the Australian Labor Party from 1996 until 2013.

Barwick, Richard Essex
Person · 1929 - 2012

Dick Barwick was a Herpetologist, zoologist and natural history artist, with expertise in palaeontology, vertebrate morphology and evolutionary biology. After an early career with a focus on Antarctica, from 1969-1994 Dick held the position of Reader, Department of Zoology at ANU. He collaborated with Ken Campbell on the study of fossil fishes.

Dick assisted his wife Diane with her anthropological work, providing illustrations for her work and preparing several for publication after her death. Barwick Valley in Antarctica named in his honour.

Capell, Arthur
Person · 1902 - 1986

Arthur Capell was born in Sydney on 28 March 1902 and attended North Sydney Boys High School before entering the University of Sydney in 1919 and graduating in 1922. He subsequently taught at several boys schools in the Sydney area and helped prepare Latin and Greek primers. He was ordained in the Anglican Church in 1925 and remained for much of his life a devout parish priest while finding time for teaching and linguistic scholarship. He was a prolific publisher in both the clerical and linguistic fields.

In 1935 Capell began PhD studies at SOAS, University of London, under R. O. Winstedt, which he was awarded in 1937 for his linguistic history of south-eastern Papua. Noted fieldwork included time in the Kimberleys in 1938 with Howard Coate (a local medical worker) to study Australian Aboriginal languages. In 1945, Capell was appointed as a lecturer at the University of Sydney, where he remained until his retirement in 1962, although he continued to publish prolifically on Pacific and Australian Aboriginal languages until shortly before his death in 1986.

Capell's linguistic influences came from a number of sources. One of earliest being the English schoolmaster and linguist Sydney Ray, with whom he worked in the 1920s. He was also influenced by the work on Melanesian languages of R.H. Codrington and the work on Oceania of Renward Brandsetter and Otto Dempwolf. As Peter Newton has noted: 'Their pioneering works inspired Capell to formulate his own theories on the genetic relationships between regional languages, the affinity between language and population movements, and suitable methods of modelling earlier language forms.'

Boots, James
Person · 1931 - 1989

James Boots, then known as Jacobus Nicolaas Boots, commenced work as a Technical Officer Grade I in the Department of Astronomy of the Research School of Physical Sciences in 1957. He worked with the Time Service and resigned in 1971.

White, J Peter
Person · 1937 -

John Peter White is an Australian archaeologist and editor. He was born in New Zealand (1937), raised in Australia, and educated at the University of Melbourne (B.A. 1961, History), University of Cambridge (B.A. 1963, M.A. 1967, Archaeology and Anthropology), and the Australian National University (Ph.D. 1968, Prehistory). He was awarded British Commonwealth Undergraduate and Graduate Fellowships (1956–1959, 1961–1963, 1964–1967) and a postdoctoral Harkness Fellowship (1970–1971). He held appointments at Melbourne (Tutor, 1960–1961), the Australian Museum (Assistant Curator, 1967–1970), and the University of California at Berkeley (Postdoctoral Fellow, 1970–1971) before joining the Department of Anthropology at the University of Sydney in 1971, where he remained until 1992.

Freeman, Edward (Ted)
Person · 1933 -

Dr Edward (Ted) Freeman OAM served with his wife, Dorothy, as a medical missionary under the Presbyterian Board of Missions in the New Hebrides from 1963 - 1970. During this time he worked as a medical superintendent at the Paton Memorial Hospital, under difficult situations. He established a blood bank, updated anaesthetic procedures, taught family planning and supervised the training of many local and expatriate doctors and nurses while working in the New Hebrides.

Snooks, Graeme Donald
Person · 1944 -

Born in Western Australia in 1944, Graeme Snooks was educated at Mount Lawley Senior High School, the University of Western Australia (BEc, 1966; MEc, 1968), and the Australian National University (PhD, 1972).

Snooks worked at Flinders University in South Australia from 1973 to 1989 when he left to become the foundation Coghlan Research Professor in Economics and History in the Institute of Advanced Studies, Australian National University, a position he held until 2010. Since 2010 he has been the Executive Director of the Institute of Global Dynamic Systems in Canberra.

Graeme Snooks is"... a systems theorist who has developed a general dynamic theory -- the "dynamic-strategy" theory -- to explain and predict complex living systems. The theory has been employed to analyse the fluctuating fortunes of life over the past 4,000 myrs and human society over the past 2 myrs; to analyse contemporary economic problems (inflation, financial crises, climate change); to explore socio-political issues(population, democracy, "clash of civilizations"); and to predict the future". [Source https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Graeme-Snooks]

Snooks has been elected Fellow of the Australian Academy of Social Sciences (1991), the Royal Historical Society (UK) (1990), and was a Fellow of the Russian Academy of Humanities from 2006 until he resigned in protest in 2022.

Person · 1927 -2017

Professor Ken Campbell was born in Ipswich, Queensland in 1927. He joined the Australian National University as Senior Lecturer, Department of Geology, Faculty of Science from 1 March 1962; and Reader from 1 July 1964. He was appointed Dean of Science in 1978, and became Professor in Geology in 1982. Campbell retired in 1993, and was appointed Emeritus Professor and Visiting Fellow (honorary) in the Department of Earth and Marine Sciences in the Faculty of Science.

Nash, David
Person · 1951-current

David Nash initially studied pure mathematics at ANU before completing a masters in Linguistics. He completed his PhD in linguistics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1980. Nash’s research has focused on central Australian and other language groups in the Northern Territory, particularly Warlpiri. Nash is an Honorary Senior Lecturer in Linguistics at the School of Literature, Languages and Linguistics at ANU.

Boot, Hector MacDonald (Mac)
Person · 1939 - 2025

Dr Hector MacDonald (Mac) Boot joined the staff of the Economic History Department at the Australian National as a lecturer in 1970. He retired as Head of Department in 2002 to join the School of Demography in the ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences (then called Demography and Sociology Program in the Research School of Arts and Social Sciences) where his research interests moved to British historical demography. During the last ten years or so Dr Boot’s time in the department of Economic History his interests focussed mainly on the history of wages and human capital formation between the mid-18th century and the late 19th century. This interest yielded four articles published in the Economic History Review between 1991 and 2006 on the relationship of relative growth earnings to the timing and relative improvement in human capital. An important sub-theme was the timing of the onset of sustained increases of the earnings between middle class and working class occupations, particular between the late 1780s and the 1850’s and , where possible, between men and women. These differences have long been the basis of significant differences in the interpretation of the Industrial Revolution and relative distribution of its benefits to different social classes in Britain.

Boot’s comparisons of middle class and working class earnings show how middle class earnings began to rise significantly earlier and faster that average working class earnings, and that male earnings in the cotton textile industry were significantly higher than female earnings even in similar occupations, though the male/female wage gap closed sharply between the late 1860s to the 1890s as the growing productivity of key male occupations in the industry increased the demand for adult female workers, whilst reducing the level of male skill required to maintain a give quality of their output. (EHR, ‘New Estimates…’, 2006). His belief was that the interpretation of increasing differences between earnings growth are easily distorted, partly because working class earnings are expressed as an average of many different occupations with a wide range of required skill levels and wage earnings. The great need was to identify the earnings of specific occupation groups. For example, the required levels of skill for men working, and their earnings, in the Boulton and Watt factories in Birmingham, increased rapidly in the late 18th century, whilst those of common labourers remain almost unchanged until well into the 19th century. Boot spent the last two years or so of his time in the Economic History Department collecting data from company archives and other sources of wage earnings between 1780 and 1850. His collection forms the greater part of this archive.

Lendon, Nigel
Person · 1944 - 2021

Nigel Lendon was a prominent figure in the Australian contemporary arts scene and was Deputy Director of the Canberra School of Art 1988-2012. He was born in Adelaide in 1944. His father, Alan Harding Lendon, was Professor of Surgery at Adelaide University which initially influenced Nigel to pursue medical studies before he shifted his focus to art. He attended the South Australian School of Art from 1964. His early works were exhibited in the 1967 Mildura Art Prize and in group exhibitions. He was one of the younger artists included in the National Gallery of Victoria's inaugural exhibition ‘The Field’ in 1968, and was recognised as one of Australia’s first Minimalist artists.

In 1972 Nigel Lendon joined the teaching faculty of the Gippsland Institute of Advanced Education to teach sculpture. He was awarded a Harkness Fellowship and from 1974 to 1976 moved to New York where he became a Fellow at the Art and Language Institute. Returning to Sydney, Australia he taught at the Sydney College of the Arts from 1977-1988 and was involved in organisations including the Artworkers Union and the Media Action Group.

In 1988, Lendon was appointed Deputy Director of the Canberra School of Art which later became part of the Australian National University (ANU). He established the PhD program and continued his art practice and curation while teaching. He curated, in conjunction with Wally Caruana and Djon Mundine, ‘The Painters of the Wagilag Sisters Story 1937-1997’ at the National Gallery of Australia. In 2002, Lendon with Tim Bonyhady curated an exhibition of war rugs which then toured. The ARC Discovery Project ‘The Rugs of War’ and the 2021 Drill Hall Gallery exhibition ‘I weave what I have seen: the war rugs of Afghanistan’ followed. Nigel Lendon taught, mentored and fostered the careers of artists including ‘outsider’ artist Slim Barrie.

Retiring in 2012, Lendon returned to studio practice, exhibiting, undertaking collaborative arts projects and continuing curatorial work. Hi work is held in the National Gallery of Australia, the Art Gallery of South Australia, Art Gallery of NSW and regional galleries.

Nigel Lendon died in 2021 after a battle with brain cancer.

Bourke, Michael
Person

Dr R.M. (‘Mike’) Bourke is an agricultural scientist and geographer and is a specialist in Papua New Guinea agriculture. He has been continuously involved in research, consulting, training, and development in PNG and other Pacific Island nations since 1970 and lived in PNG for 13 years. He is a Fellow of the Australian Institute of Agriculture and was appointed in 2015 as an Officer of the Order of Logohu by Papua New Guinea for services to PNG agriculture.
He is a specialist in food production and has been engaged on a continuous basis in PNG and elsewhere in the Pacific Islands since 1970. He has conducted fieldwork in all 93 districts in PNG, as well as in several islands in Vanuatu and Solomon Islands.

Steven, Margaret Jean Esther
Person · 1933 - 2023

Dr Margaret Steven was a distinguished historian and academic who spent much of her career at the Australian National University.

Born in Glasgow, Scotland in 1933, she attended Inverness Royal Academy in Scotland and Fort Street Girls' High School in Sydney. She earned a BA (Hons) from the University of Sydney in 1956 and a PhD from The Australian National University in 1963. She was recognized as a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society in London in 1969.

Commencing as a Research Assistant to Laurie Fitzhardinge at ANU in 1956 she took up a position as Senior Research Officer at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London from 1958 to 1959, where she contributed to the publication "A Guide to Western Manuscripts and Documents in the British Isles relating to South and South East Asia" by Oxford University Press in 1965. On return to Australia, her academic positions included Research Fellow in the Department of History at the Research School of Social Sciences (RSSS), ANU from 1959 to 1968 and from 1968 to 1975 the position of Senior Lecturer at the University of Western Australia. Returning to ANU, Margaret held the position of Visiting Fellow in the Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies (RSPAS) from 1975 to 1978. She was a Research Editor for the Australian Dictionary of Biography, ANU from 1978 to 1996.
Margaret Steven contributed entries to the Australian Dictionary of Biography, Biographical Dictionary of the Senate and the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Her research work particularly focused on biography and the early colonial period of Australian history.

O'Neill, Annette Frances
Person · 1945-2022

Annette O'Neill (nee Dallimore) attended the University of Melbourne and earned a Diploma of Social Studies, and subsequently, a Bachelor of Arts. At the time of her marriage in 1967, Annette was a social worker at Larundel Psychiatric Hospital in Melbourne. Upon moving to Papua New Guinea in 1969, although unable, as a married woman, to be appointed as a contract officer to the social worker positions, Annette O'Neill found employment as a Technical Officer, Psychological Services, Public Service Board of Papua New Guinea. Later that year, she was appointed the Honorary Secretary of the Council of Social Service of Papua. This involved developing and submitting proposals on social policy to the Administrator of the Territory of Papua and New Guinea – the executive head of the colonial government of the two territories of Papua (a colony/external territory of Australia) and the Territory of New Guinea (a Trust Territory of the United Nations) that were being brought together to independence as a single country.
At this time Annette O'Neill prepared the Directory of Community Services for Papua and served the Executive Committee of the Council and conducted the international liaison. In 1970 she was appointed the Social Worker at the Port Moresby General Hospital, but kept up her involvement with the Council of Social Service of Papua. In 1972, Annette O'Neill and others set up the Papua New Guinea Social Workers’ Association. Annette O'Neill served as the Association’s first President. The Association was active in the lobbying to get a Social Work course (and Faculty) set up at the University of Papua New Guinea.
During 1973-1974, Annette O'Neill was in London, where she received a Master of Science in the Economics, Sociology and Politics of Planning. She returned to Port Moresby in 1975, where she continued in her roles with the Council for Social Services for Papua and the Papua New Guinea Social Workers’ Association. She also was a consultant to the National Planning Office of Papua New Guinea on urbanisation policy and taught occasionally at the Administrative College, Port Moresby.
Annette O'Neil returned to Australia in 1977, where she became a tutor and session teacher at University of Sydney Social Work Department and was a director of a firm of third world development consultants. She was also involved in community and Council committees and as, President of the Nicholson St Public School, was very involved in the substantial preparations for the centenary of the School (1983), which included researching and writing (with journalist Tony Stephens) a book about Balmain “Larrikin Days.”
From 1989 to 1997, Annette, although not a lawyer, was the Senior Member for New South Wales of the Social Security Appeals Tribunal. From 1997 to 1999, she was Manager, Strategic Planning and Specialist Housing Programs in the NSW Department of Housing and then from 1999 to 2002 a member of the NSW Administrative Decisions Tribunal and from 2002 until 2012 was a Senior Member of the NSW Consumer Trader Tenancy Tribunal (subsequently incorporated into the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal).
Annette was Chairman for five years of the Centennial and Moore Park Trust. Her period of office involved the planning for and delivery of a number of events of the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games that took place took part in or used Centennial Park and the 2001 celebration of centenary of the inauguration of the Commonwealth of Australia, 1 January 1901 that also took place in Centennial Park. Annette was awarded a Centennial Medal.
Annette was also a Governor of the Law Foundation of NSW, a member then Chair of the Public Interest Advocacy Centre and also a member then Chair of Shelter (NSW). She died in 2022.

Gunson, Walter Niel
Person · 1930 - 2023

Walter Niel Gunson, known Niel Gunson, was a pioneering historian of the Pacific who completed his PHD at the Australian National University in Professor Jim Davidson’s Department of Pacific History, 1955-1958. He was born and raised in Gippsland, Victoria. He was a Fellow in the Department of Pacific and Asian History, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, 1962-1993, and held a visiting fellowship after retiring in 1993.

Gunson is recognised for his ethnographic research in the history of Protestant missions to the Pacific Islands and Polynesia in the 19th century. His later research focused on genealogy and kinship studies in the Pacific. His other interests included European, Australian Indigenous and local history. He owned a large library and archive collection which he shared with others.

Gunson mentored at least 20 PHD scholars. The Journal of Pacific History created the Gunson Prize in 2012 for scholars researching Pacific history. He was a foundational member of The Journal of Pacific History, and in 1975 helped establish the journal Aboriginal History. He worked for the Pacific Manuscripts Bureau. He established the first Tongan history workshop at the ANU in 1987 which resulted in the formation of the Tongan History Association (currently the Tonga Research Association) in 1989.

Twomey, D. Kevin
Person · circa 1916- 1993

Father D. Kevin Twomey was a Sacred Heart missionary in Papua New Guinea for many years. He first arrived in Papua New Guinea in 1944. His missionary work took him to Sideia, Basilaki, Milne Bay, Nimowa (Nimoa) and the Trobriand Islands in Eastern Papua, Chanel College and Malaguna in East New Britain and Tabwiroa College in Kiribati. He spent seventeen years in Nimowa (Nimoa). He moved to the Northern Territory in 1983, working in parishes around Darwin for many years. He died on 23 August 1993, aged 77 years.

McCall, Grant Edwin
Person · 1943 - 2023

Grant McCall was an anthropologist who focused his research on Rapanui and Eastern Polynesia. He received his BA in Anthropology from the University of California (Berkeley) in 1966, and his MA from San Franciso State College in 1968. During his MA, he studied Basque migrant communities in North and South America. He then spent three months continuing that field work in a Spanish fishing village in 1969. He received a Diploma of Social Anthropology and Bachelor of Letters from the University of Oxford, 1970-1971. From April 1972 to January 1974, he completed field work in Rapanui (Easter Island), which led to his PhD thesis at the Australian National University, Reaction to disaster: continuity and change in Rapanui social organisation (available online: http://hdl.handle.net/1885/128801). He was awarded his PhD at the Australian National University in 1977. He worked extensively in Rapanui with fieldwork trips from 1972-1975, 1984-1986, 2001-2002, and in Chile while working on Rapanui- related matters in 2008. He conducted fieldwork in Tahiti, particularly among expatriate Rapanui in 1974, 1975, 1984, and 1985. McCall also undertook fieldwork in Aitutaki and Mangaia, Cook Islands (1988, 1989/1990); Freeport Mine, West Papua Province, Indonesia (January 2011) and Timbuktu, Mali (January 2012).
Grant McCall was appointed to several positions at the University of New South Wales (UNSW) from 1976 until 2009 including the Director of the Centre for South Pacific Studies from 1987-1992 and 1999-2009. In 2011 he was appointed an associate of the Department of Anthropology at the University of Sydney. In 2014 he was made a Distinguished Professor, World Environment & Island Institute, Jeju National University.
Grant McCall was active in a number of organisations, notably the founding convenor and later Vice-President of the Australian Association for the Advancement of Pacific Studies (AAAPS) and serving as President of the International Small Islands Studies Association (ISISA) from 1998-2014.

Crouch, Harold
Person · 1940 -

Professor Harold Crouch is a scholar of Indonesian politics and founding director of the International Crisis Group office in Jakarta. Born in Melbourne, 1940, read political science at the University Melbourne before studying at the University of Bombay for Masters on Indian trade unions in the early 1960s. He was one of first Australians at an Asian university for higher degrees.

His PhD, written under Herbert Feith at Monash University and completed in 1975, was published in 1978 as The Army and Politics in Indonesia. It is regarded as a 'milestone' in the study of Indonesia’s New Order. While undertaking his PhD, he taught political science at the University of Indonesia 1968-1971.

After marrying Malaysian historian Khasnoor Johan in 1973, Crouch became Senior Lecturer at the National University of Malaysia, 1976–1985 and 1988-1990. He taught at the University of the Philippines 1983-1984.

In 1991, he joined the Australian National University as a Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Political and Social Change in the Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies. He was appointed Professor in 2002 and retired in 2005.

Crouch founded the Jakarta office of the International Crisis Group in 2000-2001. Professor Crouch is an Emeritus Professor at the Australian National University.

His career has included a number of significant monographs in the study of Indonesia and Southeast Asia, including The Army and Politics in Indonesia (1978), Domestic Political Structures and Regional Economic Cooperation in Southeast Asia (1984), Government and Society in Malaysia (1996), and Political Reform in Indonesia after Soeharto (2010).

Marr, David George
Person · 1937 -

Emeritus Professor Marr is a specialist in Vietnamese history, politics and culture. He served in the US Marine Corps between 1959 and 1964. He taught at Berkeley and Cornell, and headed the Indochina Resource Center in Washington, before coming to the ANU in 1975. He served as editor of Vietnam Today for the Australia-Vietnam Society 1978-1982. He was involved in projects relating to Vietnamese material library cataloguing and coding Vietnamese script in computers.

Significant publications include 'Vietnamese Tradition on Trial, 1920-1945', and 'Vietnam: State, War, and Revolution (1945–1946)'.

Qualifications: BA(Dartmouth), MA, PhD(Berkeley).

Walls, Sarah
Person · 1953 - 2024

Sarah Walls earned a first-class honours degree in French, and also studied law. She spent 15 years as a journalist, including three years in the United Kingdom, working for the BBC and commercial radio in London, and two based in New Caledonia covering the French South Pacific for the Australian press.
Sarah worked for various Australian media organisations during her career as a print and television journalist, including as a reporter for the ABC's Four Corners program, and a feature writer for The Australian and Sydney Morning Herald newspapers. In 1983, she was awarded the United Nations Association of Australia’s Media Peace Prize, and a Gold Citation – Press, for her work in The Australian discussing action necessary to halt the threat of nuclear conflict, and her work on other issues relating to peace and resolution of international, national and domestic conflict.
Following an incident in the late 1980s which left Sarah with progressive physical disability, she gained her translator’s accreditation in 2002 and spent the next 20 years working as an independent French translator.

Brown, Freda Yetta
Person · 1919 - 2009

Freda Brown was a political activist, trade unionist and feminist. She was an ardent supporter of women's rights, peace, and anti-apartheid movements in Australia and Internationally. A member of the Communist Party of Australia, she was also involved in establishing and leading women's organisations including the Union of Australian Women and the Women's International Democratic Foundation. Brown travelled widely in service of her political causes. In 1977, she was awarded the Lenin Peace Prize. She was honoured by the South African government in 2004 for her efforts against apartheid.
Brown was married to Bill Brown from 1943 until his death in 1992. She is the mother of former Greens Senator Lee Rhiannon.

Denoon, Donald John Noble
Person · 29 July 1940 - 2024

Born in Scotland, Donald Denoon received a BA (Natal), South Africa and a PhD from Cambridge University. He lectured in history at Makerere University, Uganda and at Ibadan University, Nigeria. He was Professor of History at the University of Papua New Guinea 1972 - 1981 and Professor of Pacific History at the Australian National University 1990-2010. He is Emeritus Professor and Visiting Fellow, Division of Pacific and Asian History, Research School of Pacific Studies.Professor Denoon was general editor of the Cambridge History of the Pacific Islanders (Cambridge University Press, 1997).

He has written extensively on Australia’s relations with Pacific countries as well as on Papua New Guinea. His publications include Getting Under the Skin: The Bougainville Copper Agreement and the Creation of the Panguna Mine (with Philippa Mein-Smith and Marivic Wyndham; Melbourne University Press, 2000), A History of Australia, New Zealand, and the Pacific (Blackwell, 2000), and Public Health in Papua New Guinea: Medical Possibility and Social Constraint, 1884–1984 (with Kathleen Dugan and Leslie Marshall; Cambridge University Press, 1989).

Ambrose, Wallace Raymond
Person · 1933 - 2024

Wallace Raymond ('Wal') Ambrose was born in Auckland, New Zealand in 1933. He began his education as an artist, at Seddon Technical College, followed by the Elam School of Art, at the time a part of Auckland University College, where he earned a Diploma of Fine Arts in 1953. He was awarded the Postgraduate Diploma of the Auckland Teachers College in 1955, for the art teachers' course.
A chance encounter that year with members of the University Archaeological Society summer excavation season saw Wal begin what would become a lifelong interest in archaeology. During the following year, Wal continued his involvement with the Society, and in 1956, the Department of Anthropology hired him as photographer and cartographer.
Wal Ambrose became the organiser and site supervisor for all of Jack Golson's excavations during his time at the University of Auckland. He also participated in excavations with Roger Green and Wilfred Shawcross in New Zealand during between 1957 and 1963. He directed the departmental excavations at the Kauri Point site in 1961-1962. He conducted three seasons of salvage work recording rock art for New Zealand National Historic Places Trust.
Ambrose also was a member and served in a variety of offices for the University Archaeological Society and the New Zealand Archaeological Association, including as editor of the quarterly NZAA newsletter. During this time Ambrose also earned his university degree at the University of Auckland, in anthropology and geology.
In 1963, he joined the then Department of Anthropology and Sociology in the Research School of Pacific Studies at the Australian National University as a Research Assistant where Jack Golson had recently accepted a position. Ambrose completed a Diploma of Archaeological Conservation at the London Institute of Archaeology in 1965. Ambrose was a pioneer in the field of archaeological conservation in Australia, writing many articles and manuals on the deterioration and conservation of materials, and playing a leading role in the establishment of the Institute for the Conservation of Cultural Material. When the new department of Prehistory was established in the Research School at ANU, Wal Ambrose’s position was reclassified as Research Officer in Conservation and Experimental Archaeology in 1966. At the same time, realising the need to stabilise artifacts, the Department of Prehistory established a Conservation section, and remains the only archaeology department in Australia to maintain a dedicated conservator on staff. In 1970 he was seconded to the Anthropology Department of the University of Papua New Guinea. In 1982, his position at the Australian National University was that of Experimental Archaeologist, which would continue until his retirement in 1998, at which point he became a Visiting Fellow of the Department of Archaeology and Natural History.
Wal Ambrose was greatly involved in the ANU excavations at Kuk, led by Jack Golson, now a UNESCO World Heritage site for establishing the independent development of agriculture in Papua New Guinea. Ambrose created methods for freeze drying the wooden artifacts being excavated from the Kuk swamp, a process that was successful in maintaining the original form of the artifacts, including marks of manufacture and use. His revolutionary treatment has now been widely adopted and recognised by the Cellulose, Paper and Textile Division of the American Chemicals Society and the Archaeological Materials Working Group of the International Council of Museums. Ambrose also developed and patented his invention for a temperature and relative humidity monitoring device for long-term soil monitoring, which was used to a great extent at Kuk and on many ANU-led excavations throughout the region, and humorously and fondly known throughout the department as “Wall’s balls” for their spherical shape.
Ambrose’s experiments with freeze drying technology led to expeditions to Antarctica, to test freeze drying without a vacuum chamber in dry, cold conditions. Ambrose’s venturi system, which allowed for air suction, was proved a success and was later patented. His findings have led to different approaches to the conservation of Antarctic heritage buildings. Ambrose patented his invention for a temperature and relative humidity monitoring device, which was
Ambrose also contributed greatly to obsidian studies. He amassed a large collection of obsidian samples, which were then tested using emission spectography. Ambrose collaborated with scientists from the Australian Atomic Energy Commission to develop PIXE/PIGME analytical system to differentiate the composition and original location of the obsidian samples. The PIXE/PIGME system became standard for obsidian study, and Wal Ambrose’s collected obsidian samples became a reference file for the composition of Pacific obsidians based on that system. Ambrose was also at the forefront of obsidian dating, especially in hydration dating.
Wal Ambrose was involved in many excavations during his long career at the Australian National University including: Northern Territory (1963); Dorset (University of London, 1964-1965); various locations in the Papua New Guinea Highlands, including Kuk (1966, 1968); Kauri Point, NZ (1967); Anir Island, New Ireland, PNG (1970-1971); Kuk, PNG (1972); survey of all known obsidian source sites in Papua New Guinea (1974); Admiralty Islands (1977), Lou and Hus Island, Admiralty Island (1978); Lou, Baluan, and Manus, Admiralty Islands (1981); Manus, New Ireland, New Britain (1984); Lou Island, Manus and Boduna Island, Talasea (1985); Baluan Island, Manus, and Schouten Islands (1987); Pamwak rockshelter, Manus Island (1989, 1990); Antarctica, experimental freeze-drying project (1990/1991); Assessment of historic building preservation at Wilkes Station Antarctica (1994).
After retiring as Experimental Archaeologist with the Australian National University department of Prehistory, Wal Ambrose became a visiting fellow of the new Archaeology and Natural History department, and later pursued his PhD. His Doctor of Letters was awarded by the Australian National University in 2006. Wal Ambrose died in January 2024.

Golson, Jack
Person · 1926-2023

Jack Golson AO was an archaeologist who did extensive fieldwork in the Pacific region. He studied history and archaeology at Cambridge University. From 1954 until he joined the ANU in 1961, he was a lecturer of archaeology at Auckland University. In 1969, Golson was appointed as the inaugural Professor of Prehistory at the ANU. He led the department until his retirement in 1991.

Moore, Brian
Person

Brian Moore was a student at the Australian Forestry School in c. 1947-1949.

Gow, Allan Flinders
Person · 1915 - 1997

Allan Flinders Gow was born in Perth in 1915. He joined the Government Secretary's Office of the Mandated Territory in 1936 and in 1937 had postings in Rabaul, Kokopo and eventually the district office at Wau, Papua New Guinea. From 1940-1944 he was enlisted in the Australian Imperial Forces (AIF) and joined the 2/25 Infantry Battalion of the 7th Division. In 1944 Gow was transferred to the Australian New Guinea Administrative Unit (ANGAU) as a lieutenant serving as a Patrol Officer and Assistant District Officer in areas such as Goilala and West Papua. He was awarded a Military Cross in 1945 and in 1946 rejoined the civil administration of Papua New Guinea with major contributions in South-West Bougainville, Madang, the Rai Coast and Manus. In 1954 he was appointed District Officer and District Commissioner in Sohano and Buka Island, Bougainville; New Ireland. He was Chief Executive Officer of the Department of Native Affairs in Port Moresby and from 1960s held posts in Southern Highlands at Mendi and Eastern Highlands at Goroka. From 1960s-1972 he was posted to Manus District and retired in 1972. Gow died in 1997.

Specht, James Richard
Person · 1940 -

James (Jim) Specht was a PhD scholar in the Department of Anthropology, Research School of Pacific Studies at the Australian National University in 1965. He was part of an archaeological group which carried out fieldwork studying Lapita pottery in Watom Island, near Raboul, and in Talasea, on the mid-north coast of New Britain. He was awarded a Ph.D for his thesis: Prehistoric and modern pottery industries of Buka Island, T.P.N.G. (1969). Specht joined the Australian Museum in June 1971. From 1991, he was Head of the Division of Anthropology and was Chief Scientist from 1997-2000 before retiring in November 2000.

Crawford, Robert
Person

Robert Crawford is Professor of Advertising in the School of Media and Communication at RMIT University.
His research focuses on the growth and development of the advertising, marketing, and public relations industries nationally and internationally.

Scott, Ernest Richard
Person · 1899 - 1971

Ernest Richard (ER) Scott was born in Geelong. Victoria, in 1899. Between 1924 and 1919. He worked for the Manfred Pastoral Company in outback New South Wales.

ER Scott lived in a workers camp while maintaining artesian bore Eureka Well. He also travelled to the homesteads of Manfred, Til Til, Kilfera and Clare stations.

ER Scott died in Geelong in 1971.

Curthoys, Barbara
Person · 1924 - 2000

Barbara Curthoys was born in Grafton, New South Wales, on 21 June 1924 to John Archibald and Eda McCallum (nee Lockwood).

In 1953 she became a full-time Communist Party of Australia Activist.

Curthoys joined the Newcastle Branch of the Union of Australian Women in 1954 and was secretary of the Branch between 1954-1960. Curthoys was elected to the organisation’s national body in 1960, 1963 and 1970. In the 1960s, she also served as secretary of the Newcastle Trades Hall Council Equal Pay and Aboriginal Advancement committees. She was also a founding member of the Newcastle Peace Forum.

Young, Elspeth Anne
Person · 1940 - 2002

Elspeth Young was a geographer who spent many years studying Indigenous communities in Australia and Papua New Guinea, focusing on land management issues facing Indigenous peoples.
She graduated from the University of Edinburgh in 1963, with MA (Honours) in Geography, with her thesis: Glenelg: a study of the developments in the economy of a West Highland District. After completing a Diploma of Education she taught geography and mathematics for a number of years in the UK and later in Trinidad. She returned to the UK to a position lecturing in economic geography at the Edinburgh College of Commerce in 1969. In 1971, she was appointed a Research Assistant and Tutor in the Geography Department of the University of Papua New Guinea. At the University of Papua New Guinea, she also pursued an additional degree, earning a MA for her thesis: Population Mobility in the Kainantu Area. Under the direction of Gerard Ward and Diana Howlett, she pursued her PhD at the Australian National University, which was awarded for her thesis: Simbu and New Ireland Migration (1977). In 1978, she switched her focus from PNG to Australia and began a study of Willowra station, north of Alice Springs. She became the first geographer to have worked on Northern Territory Land Claims, contributing to the successful claims to Ti Tree and Mt Allen (1980–85). Elspeth Young became a Research Fellow in Demography, ANU, (1980–1981) and Senior Research Fellow (1982–1985) in the North Australia Research Unit of the ANU. In 1985, she joined the Department of Geography and Oceanography at University College, University of New South Wales, Australian Defense Force Academy (1985-1994), where she would become an associate professor. In 1994 Elspeth returned to the ANU as Director of the Graduate Studies in Environmental Management and Development program. She stepped down from the position in 1999 and became a Reader at the program. She died in the UK in 2002. She made a bequest to the ANU in the form of the Elspeth Young Memorial Grant (https://study.anu.edu.au/scholarships/find-scholarship/elspeth-young-memorial-grant), supporting Indigenous Australian undergraduate and graduate students at the Australian National University.

Fingleton, Glen Harold James
Person · 1911 - 1965

Glen Fingleton was born in 1911 at Waverley, Sydney, New South Wales. He was the son of James Fingleton (1876-1920), tram driver and Labor politician, and Belinda May (Mary), née Webb (1878-1955). He was variously employed as a messenger in the Postmaster-General’s Department, civil servant, clerk, then union secretary.

Fingleton opposed efforts to ban the Communist party during the 1951 referendum. He joined a 1952 trade union delegation to the Soviet Union as a Waterside Workers Federation (WWF) representative thenclashed with the WWF Sydney Branch by publishing a report of the visit that was critical of the Soviet Union.

Fingleton died in 1965 at Glebe Island.

Buchanan, David
Person

David Buchanan SC was admitted to practise as a solicitor in Sydney in 1975. He was called to the NSW Bar in 1977 and appointed Senior Counsel (SC) in 1997. His area of practice is criminal law. He has been involved for many years in the gay community response to HIV/AIDS in Australia and generally in the Indo-Pacific region. He has a particular interest in the role of the criminal law and of public health interventions in the HIV/AIDS epidemic.

Person · 1932 - 2015

Francis Barrymore (Barry) Smith completed an MA from University of Melbourne and PhD from Cambridge University. He joined the Department of History, Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian National University as Senior Fellow from August 1966 and was promoted to Professorial Fellow in 1975. After retiring in 1997, he continued as a visiting fellow. Smith has published books concerned with British and Australian social and medical history.

Howden, Patrick
Person · 1934 -

Pat Howden graduated with a BSc from the the University of Sydney. He spent many years travelling and working in America and England.

White, John William
Person · 1937 - 2023

Emeritus Professor John White, AO CMG FRS FAA FAIP FRACI, studied chemistry at the University of Sydney before earning a doctorate at the University of Oxford. He returned to Australia in 1985 to take up the position of Professor of Physical & Theoretical Chemistry at the Australian National University.

Thorne, Alan Gordon
Person · 1939 - 2012

Alan Gordon Thorne was born in Neutral Bay, Sydney, on 1 March 1939, and was educated at North Sydney Boys High. He started his working life as a cadet journalist for the Sydney Morning Herald in 1957. He graduated from the University of Sydney in 1960 after majoring in zoology and anthropology. While studying for his PhD at the University of Sydney, (awarded 1975), he was a research fellow in the Archaeology Department in the Institute of Advanced Studies (now the Department of Archaeology and Natural History, in the College of Asia and the Pacific) at The Australian National University. He held the position of Senior Fellow there until his retirement.

Elliott, Eliot Valens
Person · 1902 - 1984

Eliot Valens Elliott was born Victor Emmanuel Elliott in New Zealand in 1902. He joined the Federated Seamen’s Union of Australasia (FSUA), later the Seamen’s Union of Australia (SUA) at the age of 17 and worked stoking boilers. He quickly earned a reputation as a tough delegate focused on campaigning for better working conditions. Elliott came to prominence during the 1935 seamen’s dispute as Assistant-Secretary of the Sydney strike committee and was elected Queensland Branch Secretary of the FSUA. By late 1924 his sailing records showed a change of name to Eliot V Elliott.

He became General Secretary of the FSUA in 1941 and in 1942 served as the seamen’s representative to the Maritime Industry Commission. He was also active in the international labour movement, sponsoring union recruitment and organisation among Australian and visiting seamen and promoting collective action by Chinese, Greek and Indonesian seamen. Although he led the SUA in their opposition to the Korean and Vietnam Wars, he generally relied on negotiation skills rather than engaging in costly strike action. He was a fierce opponent and defended the rights of SUA members in bitter battles with BHP and the Utah Development Co.

In 1949 Elliott joined the CPA’s central committee and was appointed vice-president of the maritime section of the World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU), which had strong backing from the USSR. Although the Australian Council of Trade Unions withdrew from the WFTU that same year, the SUA didn’t disaffiliate until September 1952. Elliott maintained a long-term pro-Moscow view, which contributed to his removal from the central committee of the CPA in 1969, and him joining the new Socialist Party of Australia in 1971.

Elliott's long-time partner was prominent trade unionist and activist Kondelea Xenedohos (more commonly known as Della Elliott), whom he met while both were working for the WWF.

After 37 years as General Secretary, he retired from the SUA in 1978. He died in Sydney on 26 November 1984, survived by Della and his son.

Tedder, Margaret
Person · 1925

Margaret and James Tedder lived in the Solomon Islands from 1952 until 1974. During the last years of her residence there, after the children went to Australian schools, Margaret did a lot of bush touring carrying out research on plants used by the Islanders for medicines, cures and other purposes. Most of Margaret Tedder's plant identifications were checked in the now defunct Forest Herbarium where she lodged duplicates of the plants.

McGrath, William Adrian
Person · 1933 - 2019

William (Bill) Adrian McGrath completed an Engineering, Surveying Cadetship in the Public Works Department of Western Australia from 1950-1953, and joined the Administration of the Territory of Papua New Guinea as a Cadet Patrol Officer in April 1953. In 1955 he was promoted to Patrol Officer at Erave Patrol Post in the Southern Highland Province. In 1958 McGrath attended a Long Course at ASOPA and in 1959 was appointed as Patrol Officer [Lands] at Konedobu Headquarters. He undertook land buying assignments for the PNG Administration in the Central, New Britain and Northern Districts. From 1961-1965 McGrath worked in the Lands Department before becoming Director of Lands and Surveys of the US Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands at Saipan. From 1971-1975 McGrath was the Land Department Manager in C Brewer and Co. Ltd in Hawaii. From 1975 to 1979 he was appointed the founding General Manager of the Native Land Development Corporation. From 1980 to 1984 McGrath worked as a Land Consultant to the then New Hebrides Condominium Government, continuing in the position after Vanuatu gained its independence. From 1984 to 1997 he was Land Supervisor with Chevron Niugini as the operator of the PNG Kutubu Petroleum Development Project. In 1984 Bill McGrath set up the Pacific Book House as a mail-order bookshop, which he ran intermittently until being able to devote more time to the business in 2010.

Coxsedge, Joan Marjorie
Person · 1931-2024

Joan Marjorie Rochester was born in Victoria in 1931. She married Cedric Coxsedge in 1953 and had two sons and a daughter.
She became a professional artist in the 1960s and held four exhibitions of pen and wash drawings of historic buildings as well as undertaking a commission for the Builders' Labourers' Federation drawing Green Bans buildings around Australia in 1975.
As well as being an accomplished artist, Joan was a committed activist and politician. As a member of the Save Our Sons Movement which opposed conscription for the Vietnam War, she went to jail in 1971 for anti-conscription activities. She campaigned against the Croatian terrorist movement Ustashi in the early 1970s, opposed secret service organisations and was founding Chairman of the Committee for the Abolition of Political Police in 1973.
A member of the Australian Labor Party from 1967, Coxsedge contested unsuccessfully the Legislative Assembly seat of Balwyn in 1973 and stood for pre-selection in Richmond in 1976 against the Leader of the Opposition, Clyde Holding. She eventually became the first Labor woman to be elected to the Victorian Legislative Council as the Member for Melbourne West Province in July 1979 and served until 1992. While in office she wrote and produced the newsletter Hard Facts for Hard Times from her Footscray office, in which she offered a left view of current local, national and international events.
Coxsedge was involved with a large number of community groups and projects. She served as a Board Member of the Footscray Community Arts Centre (1980-98) and Chair of Board (1990-93); Board Member of West Theatre (1989-90) and Chair of End Child Prostitution in Asian Tourism (1993-98).

Sinclair, James Patrick
Person · 28 April 1928 - 9 October 2017

James Patrick Sinclair was born in Dubbo NSW on 18 April 1928. He attended Dubbo High School, Sydney Grammar School and the Australian School of Pacific Administration (ASOPA) in Sydney. In November 1947, he Joined the Department of District Services and Native Affairs, Administration of Papua New Guinea. After attending an orientation course at the Australian School of Pacific Administration he proceeded to Papua New Guinea in August 1948 as a cadet patrol officer. He also attended the No 4 Long Course at ASOPA in 1953 - 1954. From 1948 to 1975 he served successively on many stations as a patrol officer, assistant district officer, deputy district commissioner and district commissioner. He was the last Australian District Commissioner of the Eastern Highlands District, 1969-1974.

During his service James Sinclair conducted extensive exploratory and pacification patrols in Morobe and Southern Highlands Districts. He opened the station of Koroba in 1955, Lake Kopiago base camp in 1956 and explored the then Uncontrolled area to the Strickland River until late 1958. He married Janece Marie McGrath in January 1959 and had three children. He subsequently served in charge of the Wau, Finschhafen and Lae Sub-Districts before moving to the Eastern Highlands in 1968.

James Sinclair retired in August 1975 following Independence in Papua New Guinea. He returned to his previous hobby of writing on Papua New Guinea history, which became a full-time occupation and he has since published more than 30 books. His first book, ‘Behind the Ranges’¸ was published in 1966 and told of his exploratory work in Morobe and the Southern Highlands. In 2013, several publications edited by James Sinclair were ready for publication, including publications about Peter Fox, A Lloyd Hurrell and John Middleton. Jim died on 9 October 2017.

Honours: James Sinclair has been awarded an Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1992; the Honorary Degree of Doctor of Letters from the Australian National University in 1999; and a Companion, Order of the Star of Melanesia (PNG) in 2008.

Owen, Edward Adley
Person · 1888-1929

Edward Adley Owen was employed by CSR at the Labasa Mill in Fiji circa 1909-1910. He died in Sydney on 17 May 1929, aged 41 years.

Gardner, Rhys Owen
Person · 1949 -

Rhys Gardner is a New Zealand botanist. He completed his BSc (Hons) in botany at the University of Auckland in 1971, followed by a PhD in 1977. He has served as a botanical ecologist and taxonomist for the former DSIR Botany Division at Mt Albert, Auckland, and a consulting botanist for Bioresearchers Ltd. He also served as a volunteer at the Auckland Museum Herbarium for many years, becoming a Research Associate in 1990. He has worked widely in the field, collecting specimens from Rarotonga, Fiji, Norfolk Islands, the Solomon and Chatham Islands, New Caledonia and Papua New Guinea. He has described, new to science, three species, one subspecies and one forma. He has contributed botanical specimens to herbaria around the world. Most of his publications since the 1980s are to be found in the Auckland Botanical Society Journal and the New Zealand Botanical Society Newsletter.

Hyndman, David Charles
Person · 1947 - 2021

Born in Arkansas, USA, David Hyndman studied at the University of Colorado, and completed his MA at the University of Idaho. In 1972, he moved to Australia to pursue his PhD at the Department of Anthropology and Sociology at the University of Queensland. His doctoral thesis on the Wopkaimin people of the Ok Tedi area of Papua New Guinea was completed in 1979.
He studied subsistence, ethnotaxonomy, ethnobotany, mining and Indigenous peoples, and biodiversity conservation. He completed several periods of fieldwork in the region from 1973 through the 1980s. He spent a good deal of research on the effects of the Ok Tedi mine on the surrounding area, both socially and environmentally.
From 1989-1992, Hyndman worked with the T'boli people of Mindanao in the southern Phillippines. Hyndman was a lecturer and later a reader at the Department of Anthropology and Sociology at the University of Queensland, from which he retired in 2001, moving to the Canberra region.

Troy, Patrick (Pat) Nicol
Person · 1936 - 2018

Patrick Nicol Troy was born in Geraldton, Western Australia on 22 January 1936. Son of trade unionist Paddy Troy, he worked in the private sector and in State and local government, as a planner in New South Wales and as a senior administrator in the Commonwealth, including as Deputy Secretary in the Federal Department of Urban and Regional Development in the Whitlam Government.
He held various positions at the Australian National University from 1966-2000 including professor and head of the Urban Research Unit, Research School of Social Sciences 1984-1991.
He served on State and Federal government agencies and as Deputy Secretary of the Department of Urban and Regional Development (1973-1975) he was involved in the establishment and operations of the South Australian Land Commission, Western Australian Land Council, New South Wales Land Council, Victorian Land Council and the Australian Housing Corporation. Troy held numerous appointments as a member of the South Australia Urban Land Council 1975-1977; Deputy Chairman Australian Housing Corporation 1975-1976; member of the Australian Housing Council 1984-1992; member Building Research and Development Advisory Committee 1984-1987; member of the board National Building & Technology Centre 1985-1988; member Ministerial Advisory Committee on Housing Access 1989-1990; member Urban Regional Development Advisory Committee 1992-1993; member ACT Planning and Land Council 2003-2006.
He published 15 books on cities and many papers on housing, infrastructure, transport, urban planning and development, and energy and water consumption.
Troy died in Canberra on 24 July 2018. The Patrick Troy Memorial Prize has been established at the Australian National University as a tribute to his work.

Person · 1941 - 2021

Hendrick Anton Herbert ("Hank") Driessen was a PhD student of the Research School of Pacific Studies. He began his enrollment at the Australian National University in 1978, and submitted his PhD thesis, From Ta'aroa to 'oro : an exploration of themes in the traditional culture and history of the Leeward Society Islands, in 1991. His PhD was conferred on 14 August 1992. He conducted fieldwork in the Society Islands over a number of years, and collected an archive of his research. He worked for many years at the National Archives of New Zealand, beginning as an archivist, and advancing to the head of Outreach Services and Exhibitions. He was a founding Council member of the New Zealand Society of Archivists from its inception in 1989 and served on the Council until 2000. Towards the end of his life, he returned to Australia, where he died in 2021.

Doutch, Frederick William
Person

Frederick William Doutch worked in a Burns Philp store on Banaba (Ocean Island) c. 1913 - 1915. He was an avid amateur photographer, and took photographs of his time in the Pacific, including his journey to Banaba and his time there. He often recorded the weather, light, time of exposure, and chemicals used to develop his photographic plates.

Scragg, Roy
Person · 1924-2022

Dr Roy Scragg was the Director of Public Health for the Australian Administration of the (then) Territory of Papua New Guinea from 1957 to 1970. He also served in the PNG Parliament as a member of the Legislative Council and Executive Council PNG and as Member, House of Assembly and Constitutional Committee from 1957 to 1968. Dr Scragg had a large impact on the development of the public health program in Papua New Guinea, and undertook pioneering research into infertility.
Roy Scragg was born in Feilding, New Zealand, later moving to South Australia where he obtained his medical degree from Adelaide University in 1946. He then joined the Department of Public Health for the Australian Administration of the (then) Territory of Papua New Guinea. Dr Scragg obtained a Diploma in Tropical Medicine and Hygiene from the Sydney School of Public Health in 1950, shortly before he began his ground-breaking research into infertility in New Ireland. He discovered the role of gonorrhoea in infertility in New Ireland, which had led to a decline in population. Twenty years later, in 1975, the WHO commented that the “most complete epidemiological study on the prevalence of infertility, pregnancy wastage, and child loss is that by Scragg on New Ireland in the West Pacific.” He received a Doctorate in Medicine from Adelaide University in 1955 for his thesis on the depopulation of New Ireland.
In 1957, Dr Roy Scragg was appointed the Director of Public Health for the Australian Administration of the (then) Territory of Papua New Guinea from 1957. He succeeded Sir John Gunther in the post. He ensured that the country was covered with a network of aid posts and health services, even in remote regions, to control the major diseases and causes of death. During his time as Director of Public Health, the crude death rate (per UN estimates) in PNG declined from 27.4/1000 to 16.5/1000.
Dr Scragg promoted the training of PNG nationals as doctors, nurses, and medical personnel, paving the way for independence. Although he had to send PNG nationals to Fiji for medical training, Dr Scragg was an active participant in the establishment of health science education in PNG and the establishment of the Medical School within the University of PNG.
On his return to Australia, Dr Scragg continued contributing to scholarship and public life. He served as a fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Medical Administrators, president of the Public Health Association of Australia and life member of the Australasian Epidemiological Association, among other positions. In 1971 Scragg was recognised as an officer of the Order of the British Empire and in 2021 he was appointed a member of the Order of Australia (AM) to mark his significant contributions to medicine, epidemiology and medical associations. He earned a master of public health in 1982 from the Sydney School of Public Health and was made an honorary doctor of Adelaide University in 2014. Dr Roy Scragg died in 2022.

Groube, Leslie Montague
Person · 1937 - 2018

Leslie (Les) Montague Groube was born in Hawkes Bay, New Zealand, on 12 December 1937. He completed his undergraduate and graduate degrees at Auckland University, under Jack Golson. His early focus and fieldwork was on Maori settlement patterns. He later held positions in the Anthropology Departments of the University of Otago and the University of Auckland. The New Zealand Archaeological Association’s Groube Fieldwork Award (also known as the Groube Gumboot Award) was named in his honour. After 1969, Groube left New Zealand, and spent varying amounts of time in Canberra at the Australian National University, Port Moresby, Dorset, and Cambridge where he pursued fieldwork and lecture positions. He retired to Brittany, France, and died in 2018.

Galligan, Brian John
Person · 1945 - 2019

Brian Galligan was born in Dalby, QLD in 1945. He graduated in Economics and Commerce from the University of Queensland, and has a Masters and PhD in Political Science from the University of Toronto. In the early 1980s he was Senior Research Fellow, Department of Political Science at the Australian National University and Deputy Director, Centre for Research on Federal Financial Relations. From 1984-1992 he lectured at La Trobe University. Galligan was Professor and Director of the Federalism Research Centre at the Research School of Social Sciences, ANU from 1992-94. Since 1995 he has been a Professor of Political Science at the University of Melbourne and later became a director of the university's Centre for Public Policy. Galligan is author of a number of books on Australian citizenship, politics and political economy, and has co-authored publications including Beyond the Protective State (1992) with Ann Capling.

Reddy, Jai Ram
Person · 1937 - 2022

Jai Ram Reddy was born on 12 May 1937 in Lautoka, Fiji. He completed a Bar-at-Law from the University of New Zealand, Wellington 1956-1960. Reddy entered politics in the 1970s as leader of the National Federation Party (NFP) and leader of the Opposition. His political appointments included Leader of the Opposition’s nominee in the Senate 1972-1976; Member of the House of Representatives April 1977; Leader of the Opposition 1977-1984; Attorney General and Minister of Justice April-May 1987; Member, Falvey Constitution Review Committee July 1987; NFP-FLP nominee to the Deuba Accord Committee September 1987; Member of the House of Representatives 1992; Leader of NFP and Leader of the Opposition 1992–1999; Member, Joint Parl. Select Committee on Constitution Review (1995-1997). He was a co-principal architect of the 1997 Constitution of Fiji, and a supporter of reconciliation in post-1987 Fiji. Reddy was defeated in the 1999 general elections and departed from politics in the same year. He then took up the position of President, Fiji Court of Appeal (March-August 2000; January 2002-April 2003) and Permanent Judge, International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda 2003-2008.

Della Torre, Peter
Person · 1917-2017

Peter Della Torre was an engineer who lived and worked in Papua New Guinea, mostly in Rabaul and Port Moresby. He was involved in the building of the Rabaul hospital and war memorial.

Shutler, Richard Jr
Person · 1921-2007

Richard (“Dick”) Shutler Jr. was an archaeologist who worked extensively in North America and the Pacific during his career.
World War II interrupted Shutler’s higher education. After enlisting in the US Army, Shutler spent the majority of his service (1942-1946) in the Aleutian Islands. After the war, Shutler earned his AB and MA at the University of California (Berkeley), and later his PhD at the University of Arizona in 1961. Shutler’s fieldwork focused primarily on North America until the late 1960s, although his first fieldwork in the Pacific took place in New Caledonia in 1951/2 with Edward Gifford and his first wife, Mary Elizabeth Shutler.
Dick Shutler excavated widely across the Pacific, including fieldwork in Vanuatu in 1963/4 and 1966/7, in Gilbert Islands in 1969, in Vanuatu in 1971, in the Philippines in 1976 and 1978, in Fefan Island in 1977, in Rotuma in 1981, in Hong Kong in 1990, and in Tubuai in 1994. Shutler was involved in fieldwork in Tonga throughout the 1990s.
Among his many academic appointments included serving as department chair at the University of Iowa and at Simon Fraser University. After resigning the chair at Simon Fraser University, he remained at the university with emeritus status to continue his research. He died in 2007, at age 86.

Parke, Aubrey Laurence
Person · 1925-2007

Parke was born in Moreton, Dorset in 1925. In 1951 Parke was posted to the Western District of Fiji. He would continue to work in the country, in various locations and posts, over the next 20 years. He was also a Trustee of the Fiji Museum and advised the museum on archaeological matters. After Fijian independence, Parke relocated to Canberra, where he pursued his MA and later PhD at the Australian National University based on his many years experience in Fiji.

Spriggs, Matthew
Person · 1954 -

Professor Spriggs is the Professor of Archaeology in the School of Archaeology and Anthropology, College of Arts and Social Sciences at the ANU. Prior to this he was a Senior Research Fellow in Archaeology and Natural History, in what is now the College of Asia Pacific. Before joining the ANU in 1987, he was an Associate Professor in the Anthropology Department of University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu. His research interests are the archaeology of Island Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands, and Cornish Studies.

McGowan, Barry
Person · 1945 - 2018

Dr Barry McGowan was an historian specialising in mining towns and Chinese communities in Australia. Born to Mac and Olga McGowan in Oakleigh, Victoria, Barry McGowan grew up in Mount Gambier, South Australia. He completed an economics degree at the University of Adelaide in 1967, then volunteered as an economist for the South Pacific Commission in Noumea for two years. After returning to Australia, McGowan became a public servant for the Australian Government. He worked in various departments including the Department of Industrial Relations until 1995, while privately pursuing his interests in mining, history and archaeology. McGowan’s first book on mining, Lost mines revisited: historic mining communities of the Monaro, Southern Tablelands, and south-west slopes districts of NSW, was published in 1994. In 1995 he graduated from the ANU with a Bachelor of Arts, and left the public service to work as a heritage consultant, and to commence doctoral studies at the ANU. McGowan gained his PhD in 2002, and his thesis, Dust and dreams: mining communities in south-east NSW, was published in 2010. He published many other papers, heritage reports and books relating to mining and Chinese–Australian history. McGowan was awarded a Medal in the Order of Australia for services to community history in 2018.

Ward, Ralph Gerard
Person · 1933 - 2023

Ralph Gerard Ward was born on 20 May 1933 in Taupo, New Zealand. He received a BA (1954) and MA in Geography (1956) from Auckland University College, and PhD from the University of London (1963). He worked as a Junior Lecturer in Geography 1956-1959; Lecturer in Geography 1960-1961, University of Auckland. From 1961 to August 1967 he was Lecturer in Geography at the University College London. Ward was foundation Professor of Geography at the University of Papua New Guinea 1967-1971. He joined the Australian National University as its foundation Professor of Human Geography, Research School of Pacific Studies from December 1971 to 1998. During his tenure he was Head of Department 1971-1980 and 1995-1998. Ward was appointed to Director, Research School of Pacific Studies November 1980-May 1993. After retiring in 1998, Ward became a Visiting Fellow of The Pacific Centre, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, ANU. He contributed to the governance of three Pacific universities, serving on Council for University of Papua New Guinea, National University of Samoa and Universite Francaise du Pacifique. He has also served on the Pacific Science Association and the Australian National Commission for UNESCO. He died on 16 January 2023 in Adelaide.

Burns, Arthur Lee
Person · 1922 - 1995

Professor Arthur Burns was a Professor of Political Science, specialising in superpower rivalry, nuclear weapons and game theory. Born in Summer Hill, Sydney on 24 March 1922 to Crayton and Denise Burns, Arthur Burns was educated at Scotch College, before studying history, theology and philosophy at the University of Melbourne. In 1946 he was awarded a Masters in Philosophy and History for his thesis on Historical Explanation. In the same year Burns married Netta Cox, and was ordained as a Presbyterian minister. In 1947 to 1948 he attended the London School of Economics under a British Council Scholarship. On returning to Melbourne, Burns tutored and lectured in Church History at Ormond College Theological Hall, and in History at the University of Melbourne. He was appointed Research Fellow in International Relations within the Research School of Pacific Studies at the Australian National University in 1955. In 1961 Burns transferred to the Department of Political Science, Research School of Social Sciences, where he oversaw a Defence Studies Project 1963 – 1966, which was managed by the department on behalf of the Australian Institute of International Affairs. Burns was appointed to second Chair in the Department in 1966. He undertook international posts at a variety of institutions including the Universities of Princeton and Chicago, and the Royal Institute of Strategic Studies. Burns published prolifically in the 1950s and 1960s, with his major works being From Balance to Deterrence (1956), and Of powers and their politics: a critique of theoretical approaches (1968). Burns was involved in litigation with the ANU 1981 to 1994 after his employment was terminated. He was an independent candidate for the Australian Capital Territory Assembly in 1995 as part of the Abolish Self Government Coalition, but died five days before the election.

Brennan, Geoffrey
Person · 15 Sep 1944 - 29 Jul 2022

Emeritus Professor Geoffrey Brennan was an Australian philosopher who held professorial positions at ANU, University of North Carolina, Duke University and Virginia Tech. Originally trained as an economist, he worked at the intersection of economics, politics and philosophy and played a major role in the development of interdisciplinary 'PPE' research. He was Director of the Research School of Social Sciences at ANU from 1991 to 1996. He was made a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Social Sciences in 1987 and was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by the University of St. Gallen in 2002.

Jolliffe, Jill
Person · 7 Feb 1945 - 2 Dec 2022

Jill Jolliffe was an Australian journalist who reported on East Timor since 1975. She is the author of 'Cover-up : the inside story of the Balibo Five' (Scribe, 2001).

Baker, John R
Person · 1946-

Dr John Baker holds a BA degree with First Class Honours from Hull University, an MA from London University and a PhD from the Australian National University. His academic and business interests include public management and the economic development of countries in South East Asia and the South Pacific. In his early career (1964 - 1965) he worked in the Solomon Islands under the Voluntary Service Overseas (VSO) scheme.

John Baker was an economist to the Government of Tonga from August 1969 to May 1970, the first economist employed by the Tonga Government to work on development planning. He was engaged to undertake the preparation and drafting of the Tonga Development Plan 1970-75, Tonga's second development plan. Following his work in Tonga, Dr Baker studied at the ANU where he completed a PhD on shipping in Tonga and Fiji.

In 1975 he joined AIDAB, Australian Agency for International Development (the predecessor of AusAID) where he was Head of the South Pacific Section. He occupied a number of other senior government positions in Canberra including positions in the Corporate Services Division of the Department of Primary Industry, the Departments of Prime Minister and Cabinet and Foreign Affairs. He was the Australian Ambassador to Madagascar and the Comoros from 1982 to 1984.

During the late 1980s he was First Assistant Commissioner of the newly-created Public Service Commission (PSC) and played a leading role in the development of various APS management reforms, which produced APS 2000, a major report on the future development of the Australian Public Service (APS). In his subsequent career, Dr Baker was Australian High Commissioner to Tanzania.

In 1991, John Baker established his own Canberra based consultancy company, the Centre for Public Management Pty Ltd (CPM) and the Executive Director. John Baker is a Fellow of the Australian Institute of Management.

Curthoys, Ann
Person · 1945 -

Ann Curthoys was born in Sydney in 1945 to Geoffrey Carlton Curthoys and Barbara Lindsay McCallum, both of whom were members of the Communist Party of Australia until 1970. Curthoys graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) degree in 1967 and also holds a Diploma in Education from Sydney Teachers' College. While still an undergraduate she took part in the 1965 Student Action for Aborigines Survey and Demonstration Bus Tour (Freedom Ride) to examine racial discrimination in some New South Wales towns. She then undertook a PhD at Macquarie University on the history of race relations in New South Wales in the mid nineteenth century, comparing British colonists' attitudes to Chinese immigration with attitudes to Aboriginal people, graduating in 1973.

After graduation Curthoys worked overseas then began teaching and researching at Canberra College of Advanced Education, New South Wales Institute of Technology (Later UTS). In 1995 She took up the Chair of History at the Australian National Unversity where she taught on Aboriginal History, Australian History and Historiography. he was elected to the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia in 1997 and the Australian Academy of the Humanities in 2003.

Robertson, Mavis
Person · 1 Jun 1930 - 17 Feb 2015

Born Mavis Moten in Melbourne, to John and Claire (nee Tilley) Moten. Member of the Eureka Youth League in the 1940s. Married journalist Alec Robertson in 1953. Campaigned on numerous causes including against apartheid, in support of Chilean refugees following the 1973 coup, in the peace and anti-nuclear movement, and for women’s liberation. Became a joint secretary of the Communist Party of Australia in 1976 and left the party in 1984. First chair of Jessie Street Trust. Became involved in the superannuation industry in the 1980s and held leadership roles in several organisations, including the Australian Institute of Superannuation Trustees (AIST), Cbus, and Women in Super. In 1998 co-founded the Mother’s Day Classic fun run for breast cancer research.

Tully, Bill
Person · 1937 - 2021

Bill Tully was an employee of the National Library of Australia from 1968 to 2002. He was involved as an editor and writer in the Australian Independence Movement from 1975-1985. In this period he was active in running the ACT Branch of the Australian East Timor Association and the Campaign for an Independent East Timor. Tully covered these areas of political and social interests as a volunteer on the Canberra public radio 2XX, presenting Asia Pacific News program from 1982-1984, and Writers Workshop (later Sound Print) from 1983. He was a former editor of Blast magazine and editor of Voice magazine.

Bulmer, Ralph
Person · 1928 - 1988

Ralph Bulmer was a social anthropologist, naturalist, and ethnobiologist noted for his work in Papua New Guinea, particularly with the Kalam. He born in Hereford, UK, and received his BA om anthropology from the University of Cambridge in 1953. He studied Sami culture in Sweden and Norway before pursuing his Ph.D. at Australian National University. His fieldwork for his Ph.D. was based in the Western Highlands of Papua New Guinea, in particular among the Kyaka-Enga people in the Baiyer Valley. He was awarded his Ph.D. in 1962. He then became a Lecturer, and later Senior Lecturer at the University of Auckland.
In 1964, Bulmer began his work among the Kalam in Papua New Guinea. He took the unprecedented step of changing the role of his Kalam informants to that of collaborators and co-authors, involving them in the documentation of their culture. Ian Saem Majnep, a Kalam naturalist, was his primary collaborator and co-authored a number of publications with Bulmer. The Kalam project set out by Bulmer eventually included two anthropologists, two linguists,and more than twenty zoologists, botanists, and other scientific colleagues. He became the Foundation Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Papua New Guinea in 1968, serving until 1973. He then returned to the University of Auckland as Chair in Social Anthropology until 1988.

Person · 1926 - 2022

Professor Harold Brookfield was a British and Australian geographer with interests in rural development, family farming, land use and society in developing countries. He completed a BA and PhD at the London School of Economics. He was briefly a lecturer in Geography and Birkbeck College, London and Lecturer in Charge at the Department of Geography, University of Natal where he began engaging with development and social justice issues in South Africa and Mauritius. After three years, he moved to Australia to join the University of New England and in 1957 joined the Research School of Pacific Studies at the Australian National University where he spent most of his academic career. He spent two periods at the Geography (later Human Geography) Department in RSPAS – the first from 1957 to 1969, and then again from 1982 until his retirement in 1991, at one point becoming the Head of the Human Geography Department and Acting Director of the School.
Brookfield conducted field work in Papua New Guinea, the New Hebrides, New Caledonia, the Solomon Islands, Bougainville and the Philippines. His interests focussed on Papua New Guinea where he conducted fieldwork in the highlands and collaborated with anthropologists from the Research School. In the 1970s his work extended to smaller islands of the Caribbean and the smaller eastern islands of Fiji. His work largely focused on the relationship between humans and their landscapes, particularly as this was understood through the lens of agricultural production. His work on agricultural intensification, land use and land degradation, and the impact of El Nino events was ground-breaking and innovative.

Robertson, Alec
Person · 25 Aug 1918 - 15 Mar 1974

Born in Brisbane. Cadet at Courier-Mail. Joined Communist Party of Australia in 1939. Enlisted in Australian Army in 1941 and served as lieutenant in New Guinea then as a pilot in the Australian Air Force. Returning to Courier-Mail after the war, he was awarded the Kemsley Empire Journalism Scholarship, reporting from London and Europe. Fired by Keith Murdoch for not obeying editorial instructions. Robertson then become sub-editor of the Melbourne Argus, before joining the Victorian Peace Council. He became secretary of the NSW Peace Council in 1951. Robertson married Mavis Moten in 1953. In the 1950s Robertson was elected to the CPA's Central Committee and later the National Committee. Became Chief Editor of the Tribune in 1964. Campaigned for Papua New Guinea's independence and the anti-Vietnam war movement, and other left wing causes.

Robertson, Alec (Senior)
Person · 1892 - 1965

Foundation member of the Australian Journalists' Association in Queensland. School teacher and headmaster, and early member of the Queensland Teachers' Union. Journalist at Queensland Daily Mail. Journalist, then later the Chief Editor of the Labor Party's Queensland newspaper (the Daily Standard). Prominent in anti-conscription during WWI. Editor of the Courier-Mail from 1932. First station manager of the Courier-Mail radio station (4BK-AK). Chief of public relations for the Southern Electrical Authority 1951 - 1960.

Luck, Geoffrey
Person · 1931 - 2021

Geoffrey Luck was a radio journalist for the Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC). He was based in Longreach, Queensland, 1953-1955; becoming a foreign correspondent in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, 1957-1967; Northern Ireland and London. On his return to Sydney Luck was appointed Economics and Finance Correspondent with the News Division in early 1972. His duties included presenting the radio program, The Week in Business, until 1976. He completed an MBA at Macquarie University in 1975.

Carnie, Liston
Person · 28 Nov 1874 - 27 Dec 1958

Liston Carnie was born in Newhaven, Scotland and died in North Sydney. He was a master plumber. He arrived in Australia in 1929. In the 1930s and early 1940s he ran a family plumbing business in North Sydney. In the mid 1940s he became the plumber at the Mater Hospital, Pacific Highway, North Sydney and remained there until his retirement.

Munro, Paul Robert
Person · 1939 -

Paul Munro was born in Condobolin, New South Wales on 13 July 1939. He graduated from Sydney University Law School and was admitted to the NSW Bar in 1961. From July 1961 he worked as a Legal Officer at the Public Solicitor’s Office in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. From 1966 to 1968 Munro was an Industrial Advocate for the PNG Public Service Association, which led to his work in industrial relations. Munro was National Secretary, Council of Australian Government Employee Associations 1969-1977; he worked with Dr H C Coombs on the Royal Commission on Australian Government Administration 1974-1976; and was Federal Secretary of the Administrative & Clerical Officers' Association (ACOA) 1979-1986. His service as a union official included five years as a member of the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) Executive and he was later a part-time member of the Administrative Review Council. Munro served from 1986 to 2004 as Justice Munro, a Senior Presidential Member of the Australian Industrial Relations Commission (AIRC) and its predecessors. He has been on the Australian Institute of Employment Rights Executive Committee since its establishment in 2005.

Reay, Marie Olive
Person · 1 Jul 1922 - 16 Sep 2004

Marie Olive Reay was born in Maitland, New South Wales and began her career in anthropology at Sydney University, where she studied for an MA and undertook fieldwork in Indigenous communities in western New South Wales (Walgett, Bourke, Moree, Coonabarabran and others) in the 1940s. She later extended her fieldwork with Indigenous communities to Borroloola in the Northern Territory. From 1953, as a doctoral student supervised by WE Stanner in the Department of Anthropology and Sociology in the Research School of Pacific Studies at Australian National University, she began field research in the Wahgi Valley in the Western Highlands of Papua New Guinea, with the Kuma. Reay's PhD thesis was published as The Kuma: Freedom and Conformity in the New Guinea Highlands in 1959, the same year she was appointed to a research fellowship in the Department of Anthropology, ANU. Working at ANU for the next 30 years and retiring in 1988, Reay died in Booragul, New South Wales on 16 September 2004.

Evans, Gareth John
Person · 1944 -

Gareth John Evans was born in Melbourne, Victoria on 5 September 1944. After graduating from the University of Melbourne BA, LLB (Hons) he studied at Oxford University and earned an MA in Politics, Philosophy and Economics.

Gareth Evans is currently Distinguished Honorary Professor at the Australian National University, where he was Chancellor from 2010-19 and President Emeritus of the International Crisis Group, the Brussels-based independent global conflict prevention and resolution organisation which he led from 2000 to 2009.

Gareth Evans was a member of the Australian Parliament for 21 years. He was Senator for Victoria from 1978 to 1996, serving as Deputy Leader (1987-93) and then Leader (1993-96) of the Government in the Senate, and was a member of the House of Representatives from 1996 until September 1999, serving as Deputy Leader of the Opposition (1996-98). As one of Australia's longest serving Foreign Ministers, he was best known internationally for his roles in developing the UN peace plan for Cambodia, bringing to a conclusion the international Chemical Weapons Convention, founding the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum and ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), and initiating the Canberra Commission on the Elimination of Nuclear Weapons.

Jupp, James
Person · 23 August 1932 - 11 April 2022

James Jupp was born in Croydon, England in 1932. He studied at the London School of Economics 1951-1956, and the University of London where he earned his PhD in 1975. He was General Editor of the Bicentennial Encyclopaedia of the Australian People 1984-1988 and of the second edition in 2001. Jupp was a member of the Advisory Council on Multicultural Affairs and chairman of the Review of Migrant and Multicultural Programs and Services (ROMAMPAS), which presented its report Don't Settle for Less, to the Minister for Immigration in August 1986. He was formerly chairman of the ACT Multicultural Advisory Council and of the ACT Reference Group of the Bureau of Immigration, Multicultural and Population Research. Jupp was Director of the Centre for Immigration and Multicultural Studies in the Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian National University 1988 - 2012 and an Adjunct Professor of the RMIT University in Melbourne. He was awarded the Order of Australia in 2004.

Hope, Geoffrey Scotford
Person · 27 May 1944 - 2021

Geoffrey Hope was an environmental historian. His research interests included vegetation history and the historical biogeography of Australian, Asian and Pacific biota. He held a BSc (Hons), a MSc and a DSc from Melbourne University, and a PhD from ANU. He was an Emeritus Professor in the Department of Archaeology and Natural History and a Visiting Fellow in the Fenner School of Environment and Society.

Geoffrey Hope has been based at Australian National University since 1978, lecturing in Geography before moving to a research position in RSPAS (now College of Asia Pacific) in 1990. As an environmental historian he works with a mix of methodologies and related fields of study including archaeology, biogeography, palaeontology, soil sciences and geoscience. His research interests include the impact of people on landscapes, including the impact of erosion, surface processes and silting, climate change and fire on human habitation. He is also interested in the roles of climate change and fire on human responses and adaptability. This work aims to contribute practical help for control of greenhouse emissions and solutions to problems of land management and biodiversity conservation.

Hamilton, Kirsty
Person · c1950 - 2011

Kirsty Hamilton was a radio, television and on-line journalist. She was born in Melbourne in approximately 1950 and died in 2011. She earned degrees from Monash University in Melbourne and Columbia University in New York.

Dutton, Thomas Edward
Person · 1935 - 2021

Dr Thomas (Tom) Dutton was a Senior Fellow, Department of Linguistics, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University. He began as a Research Fellow in Linguistics from 29 April 1969, and was promoted to Fellow and Senior Fellow before retiring from the ANU in 1997. Prior to taking up linguistics Dutton was an Education Officer in the Administration of Papua and New Guinea. His many books include studies on Papuan languages.

Lal, Brij Vilash
Person · 1952 - 2021

Brij Vilash Lal was born in the village of Tabia, on the island of Vanua Levu. He received his tertiary education at the University of the South Pacific, the University of British Columbia and the Australian National University. He joined the Australian National University in 1990 working in the Department of Pacific History, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies. His prior teaching posts in World and Pacific History were held at the universities of the South Pacific, Hawaii in Manoa, and Papua New Guinea. Lal was a member of the Fiji Constitution Review Commission whose report forms the basis of Fiji's constitution; Founding Editor of 'The Contemporary Pacific: A Journal of Island Affairs,' (Honolulu) and of 'Conversations,' (Canberra); Editor, The Journal of Pacific History; Chairman, Pacific Manuscript Bureau; Founding Director of The Centre for the Contemporary Pacific, ANU; Convenor, Division of Pacific and Asian History and former Chair of Faculty, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, ANU. He was elected Fellow of the Australian Humanities Academy in 1996. He is currently Professor of Pacific and Asian History at the ANU College of Asia and the Pacific.

Person · 14 July 1917 - 19 September 1988

Patrick Moran was appointed foundation Professor of Statistics in the Research School of Social Sciences on 1 January 1951. He had studied chemistry, mathematics and physics at the University of Sydney, Cambridge University and Oxford University, and worked on rocketry and applied physics projects during World War II. He retired in 1982 but remained at ANU as Emeritus Professor working on the application of statistical methods and epidemiological methods to psychiatry. He was a Fellow of the Royal Society, a Fellow of the Academy of Science and was awarded the Lyle Medal for outstanding research accomplishments in mathematics.

Burton, John
Person · 1953 -

As a Principal Research Fellow at the Centre for Social Responsibility in Mining at the University of Queensland, Dr John Burton collected many documents relating to mining and areas of Papua New Guinea affected by mining. His primary research interests include social mapping and land ownership in Melanesia; development in the Pacific; social impacts of mining; governance and traditional politics in Papua New Guinea; Native Title research in Torres Strait and among rainforest Aboriginal groups in North Queensland; genealogy in Australia and Melanesia.

Marginson, Raymond David
Person · 1923 - 2019

Dr Ray Marginson AM was born in Melbourne on 13 December 1923 and graduated with a Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Melbourne in 1946. While at university he was involved with the Socialist Study Group and later became a member and treasurer of the Victorian Fabian Society 1951-1953. He joined the Commonwealth Public Service on 20 July 1948 as a Research Clerk in the Central Administration Section of the Department of Transport. He was promoted to Executive Officer of the Australian Transport Advisory Council, and Personal Assistant to the Permanent Head of the Department in 1949. In 1950 Marginson joined the Postmaster General's Department as Research Officer then Senior Research Officer in the Director General's Office; Senior Finance Officer 1955-1959; Executive Officer in the Director General's Office 1959-1960; controller of the Finance Branch, Finance and General Services Division 1960-1964; Deputy Assistant Director General in the Finance and Accounting Branch of the Management Services Divisioin 1964-1966. In 1965 he was appointed Vice-Principal of the University of Melbourne, until his retirement in 1988. His many other roles have included Chairman of the Melbourne and Metropolitan Board of Works (MelbourneWater), President of the Museum of Victoria, a director of Geotrack International, Vice-Chairman of the Melbourne Theatre Company, member of the Howard Florey Institute and founding President of the Victorian Jazz Archive.

Paterson, Mervyn Silas
Person · 1925 - 2020

Professor Paterson joined the new Department of Geophysics in the Research School of Physical Sciences as a Senior Research Fellow under Professor JC Jaeger in June 1953, having been awarded a Bachelor of Engineering degree from the University of Adelaide in 1945 and a Doctor of Philosophy degree from Cambridge University in 1949. He had worked in the Division of Aeronautics at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation from 1945 to 1953. In 1956 he was appointed as a Reader in Crystal Physics and in 1987 as a Professor in the Research School of Earth Sciences, which had been separately established from the Research School of Physical Sciences in 1973. Paterson started the design and construction of the first High Pressure, High Temperature (HPT) rock deformation apparatus in 1960 but it was not until 1988 that Paterson Instruments Pty Ltd (jointly owned by Paterson, his wife Katalin and ANUTECH) was formed to manufacture the apparatus as a commercial activity. Over the next twenty years, 13 were manufactured and sold to universities and research institutions in the United Kingdom, France, the United States, Germany, Switzerland and China. Paterson retired in 1990 and worked as a consultant to Australian Scientific Instruments which took over Paterson Scientific Instruments Pty Ltd in the mid-1990s.

Hughes, Philip
Person

Philip Hughes worked full time as the Kuk project’s geoarchaeologist from 1974 to 1977 while at ANU. From 1985–1991, while at University of Papua New Guinea (UPNG), working with colleagues and students, he undertook research into soil erosion and catchment and swamp hydrology at Kuk aimed at further understanding the site’s geoarchaeology and human impact on soil erosion in the catchment from the late Pleistocene to the present.

Christensen, Ole A.
Person · - 1974

Ole Christensen completed his BA in 1970 and his MA in 1972, at the Department of Archaeology at the University of Calgary. After field work in South America, he came to the ANU as a PhD scholar in 1972, and worked for the Department of Prehistory's project at Kuk in the upper Wahgi valley, led by Dr Jack Golson. Christensen was involved in the study of the agricultural history of the area, especially scrutinizing resource utilization near the site of the Department's excavations at Kuk. Ole Christensen died, aged 29, in a car accident on 16 December 1974.

Weiner, James F
Person · -2020

James F Weiner received his PhD in Anthropology from the Australian National University in 1984. He has conducted field work among the Foi of Papua New Guinea and has written several books on their myth and social structure, their poetry and geography, and their myth in relation to psychoanalytic theory. He taught at the ANU, University of Manchester and was Professor at the University of Adelaide 1994-1998. In 1998 he became a full-time consultant anthropologist.