List of University of Tasmania people
This is an incomplete list of University of Tasmania people, including alumni and staff.
Alumni
Academia
- Peter Conrad, literary academic and author
- Rodney Croome, AM, academic and LGBT rights activist
- Peter Forrest, philosopher
- Marnie Hughes-Warrington, Deputy Vice-Chancellor of the Australian National University
- Jeff Malpas, philosopher
- Tim McCormack, academic and specialist in international humanitarian law
- Michael Tate, AO, Catholic priest, legal scholar and former Labor politician
- Karen Thorpe, Professor, Developmental Psychology, Centre of Children's Health Research, Brisbane
- Helen Tiffin, post-colonial theorist
Business
- Andrew MacLeod, businessman, author, former humanitarian lawyer and aid worker
Government
Vice-Regal
- Stanley Burbury, past Governor of Tasmania
- William Cox, past Governor of Tasmania
- Sir Guy Green, past Governor of Tasmania
- Peter Underwood, past Governor of Tasmania[1]
- Kate Warner, AM, legal academic and current Governor of Tasmania[1]
Politics
Federal politicians
- Eric Abetz, Liberal politician
- Neal Blewett, AC, former Labor politician
- Ross Hart, Labor politician
- Michael Hodgman, , former Liberal politician and barrister
- Justine Keay, Labor politician
- Christine Milne, Senator and former leader of the Australian Greens
State Premiers
- David Bartlett, former Premier of Tasmania
- Michael Field, former Premier of Tasmania
- Lara Giddings, Labor politician and former Premier of Tasmania
- Will Hodgman, Liberal politician and current Premier of Tasmania
State and territory politicians
- Guy Barnett, Liberal politician
- Sir Max Bingham, QC, former Deputy Premier and Opposition Leader of Tasmania
- David Bushby, Liberal politician
- Roy Fagan, former barrister and Deputy Premier of Tasmania
- Mike Gaffney, Independent MLC
- Adrian Gibson, OAM, former Liberal politician and barrister
- Sue Napier, former Liberal politician
- Michelle O'Byrne, Labor politician
Other politicians
- Sue Hickey, Lord Mayor of Hobart
- Albert Van Zetten, Mayor of Launceston
- Hannah Yeoh, member of the Selangor State Legislative Assembly[2]
Public servants
- Ashton Calvert, AC, former Secretary of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade; Rhodes Scholar
- Stephen Gumley, CEO of the Australian Defence Materiel Organisation[3]
- Charles Philip Haddon-Cave, former Financial Secretary of Hong Kong[4]
- Fathimath Dhiyana Saeed, SAARC Secretary-General[5]
Humanities
Arts
- Anthony Ackroyd, comedian, speaker and writer[6]
- Courtney Barnett, musician
- Rianti Cartwright, actress, model and presenter of MTV Indonesia
- John Clark, former director of NIDA
- Ian Cresswell, composer
- Essie Davis, film actress
- Matthew Dewey, composer
- Constantine Koukias, composer
- Michael Lampard, opera singer, conductor and composer
- Geoffrey Lancaster, classical pianist
- Andrew Legg, ARIA-award nominated musician
- Raffaele Marcellino, composer
- Luke McGregor, comedian and actor
- Graeme Murphy, AO, ballet dancer and choreographer
- Robyn Nevin, AM, actress, director and former head of the Sydney Theatre Company
- Tom Samek, painter, stage designer and printmaker
- Prithviraj Sukumaran, South Indian actor[7]
- David Walsh, founder of the Museum of Old and New Art
History
- Marilyn Lake, historian
- Henry Reynolds, historian
Journalism and media
- Andy Muirhead, former ABC radio and television presenter
- John J. Smithies, founding director of the Australian Centre for the Moving Image
- Charles Wooley, television journalist
Literature, writing and poetry
- Ivy Alvarez, author and poet
- Tim Bowden, author and journalist
- Helene Chung Martin, author and journalist
- Stephen Edgar, poet
- Richard Flanagan, author and film director; Rhodes Scholar[8]
- Christopher Koch, author of The Year of Living Dangerously
- Amanda Lohrey, author and academic
- Christobel Mattingley, author
- Margaret Scott, author and poet
- Aaron Smith, author and journalist
- Vivian Smith, poet
Law
- Damian Bugg, former Commonwealth and Tasmanian Director of Public Prosecutions
- Enid Campbell, AO, legal scholar, first Australian female professor and law school dean
- Chief Justice Ewan Crawford, Former Chief Justice and Lieutenant-Governor of Tasmania[9]
- Stephen Estcourt, QC, Tasmanian Supreme Court judge
- Philip Lewis Griffiths, Acting Chief Judge of the Mandated Territory of New Guinea[10]
- Hon Justice Peter Heerey, Federal Court Judge[11]
- Duncan Kerr, Judge of the Federal Court of Australia, President of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal and former Attorney-General of Australia
- Michael Mansell, Aboriginal rights activist and criminal lawyer
- Davendra Pathik, former Judge of the Supreme Court of Fiji
- David Mitchell, former Solicitor-general of Lesotho, Tasmanian representative at the Australian Constitutional Convention 1998 and procurator of the Presbyterian Church of Australia
Sciences
- William Noel Benson, geologist
- Edward Byrne, neuroscientist, Principal of King's College, London; former Vice-Chancellor of Monash University
- John Donaldson, applied mathematics academic; father of Mary, Crown Princess of Denmark
- Theodore Thomson Flynn, biologist and professor of biology; father of Errol Flynn
- Sir Leonard Huxley, physicist
- Kenneth G. McCracken, physicist and winner of the Pawsey Medal[12]
- Beryl Nashar, geologist and first female PhD in geology, first female Dean of a School in Australia
- David Paver Mellor, inorganic chemist
Sports
- Brendon Bolton, assistant coach of Hawthorn Football Club and former AFL footballer
- Scott Brennan, gold medalist at the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics for rowing[13]
- Peter Daniel, former Essendon footballer
- Simon Hollingsworth, former athlete and CEO of the Australian Sports Commission; Rhodes Scholar
- Kerry Hore, Olympic rower
- Hamish Peacock, Olympic javelin thrower
- Meaghan Volker, Olympic rower
Other
- Phillip Aspinall, Primate of the Anglican Church of Australia
- Simon Longstaff, Executive Director of the St James Ethics Centre
- Michael Lynch, evangelist and Christian blogger
- Bill Mollison, "father of permaculture"[14]
- Brodie Neill, industrial designer
Administration
Chancellors
Order | Chancellor | Years | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | William Zeeman | ???? – 1998 | |
2 | Michael Vertigan, AC | 1998 – 2006 | |
3 | Damian Bugg, AM, QC | 2006 – 2012 | [15] |
4 | Michael Field, AC | 2013 – present | [16] |
Vice-Chancellors
Order | Vice-Chancellor | Years | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | George Clarke | 1890 – 1898 | |
2 | James Backhouse Walker | 1898 – 1899 | |
3 | Thomas Stephens | 1900 – 1901 | |
4 | Andrew Inglis Clark, KCMG | 1901 – 1903 | |
5 | Sir Neil Elliott Lewis, KCMG | 1903 – 1909 | |
6 | Tetley Gant, CMG | 1909 – 1914 | |
7 | William Stops | 1914 – 1933 | |
8 | Robert Dunbabin | 1933 – 1933 | |
9 | E. Morris Miller, CBE | 1933 – 1945 | |
10 | Alan Burn | 1945 – 1949 | |
11 | Torleiv Hytten, CMG | 1949 – 1957 | |
12 | Keith Isles, CMG | 1957 – 1967 | |
13 | Sir George Cartland, CMG | 1968 – 1977 | |
14 | David Caro, AO OBE | 1978 – 1982 | |
15 | Alec Lazenby, AO | 1982 – 1991 | |
16 | Alan Gilbert, AO | 1991 – 1995 | |
17 | Don McNicol | 1996 – 2002 | |
18 | Daryl Le Grew, AC | 2003 – 2010 | |
19 | Peter Rathjen | 2011 – present | [17] |
Faculty
- Thomas Bavin, law academic and past Premier of New South Wales
- David Bollard, classical pianist
- Barry Brook, environmental sustainability academic
- Hans Adolph Buchdahl, physicist
- Douglas Copland, economist
- Rodney Croome, LGBT advocate and academic
- Winifred Curtis, botanist, author and plant science academic
- Robert Delbourgo, physicist
- John Dalgleish Donaldson, mathematics academic
- Roy Fagan, law academic and past Deputy Premier of Tasmania
- John Field, senior army officer and engineering academic
- Theodore Thomson Flynn, biologist
- Adrian Franklin, sociologist and television personality
- Barbara R. Holland, mathematics academic
- Peter D. Jarvis, physicist
- Michael Kirby, former Justice of the High Court of Australia
- Gareth Koch, classical guitarist
- E. E. Kurth, chemistry academic
- Frank Madill, AM, former Liberal politician, medical doctor and author
- John Martinkus, journalist
- James McAuley, poet
- Tim McCormack, international humanitarian law academic
- Lindsay Simpson, journalist, academic and crime writer
- Sydney Sparkes Orr, philosopher
- Garth Paltridge, atmospheric physicist
- Doug Parkinson, law academic and politician
- Anya Reading, geophysicist
- Grote Reber, radio astronomer
- Henry Reynolds, historian
- Steven M. Smith, plant genetics and biochemistry academic
- Muthucumaraswamy Sornarajah, law academic
- Michael Tate, Catholic priest, legal scholar and former Labor politician
- Helen Tiffin, post-colonial theorist
- Ernest Ewart Unwin, education academic
- Edward Ronald Walker, diplomat and economist
- Kate Warner, legal academic and current Governor of Tasmania[1]
- Peter Whish-Wilson, politician and economist
References
- 1 2 3 Curriculum Vitae of The Governor
- ↑ "Hannah Yeoh Tseow Suan" (PDF). Retrieved 2012-09-27.
- ↑ Australian Government, Department of Defence. "Chief Executive Officer of the Defence Materiel Organisation - Department of Defence". Defence.gov.au. Archived from the original on 12 September 2009. Retrieved 2010-05-16.
- ↑ "An examination of shifting costs and their effects on Tasmanian exporting industries / by C.P. Haddo... | National Library of Australia". Catalogue.nla.gov.au. Retrieved 2010-05-16.
- ↑ "bhutantimes - SAARC's council of ministers summit kicks off". Bhutantimes.bt. 2011-01-12. Retrieved 2011-08-17.
- ↑ "Panellist: Anthony Ackroyd". Q&A. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 3 June 2016.
- ↑ Shanker R., Hari (2009-10-15). "Metro Plus Thiruvananthapuram: On a roll". The Hindu. Retrieved 2011-08-02.
- ↑ "NOTES FOR READING GROUPS - Richard Flanagan" (PDF). Picador Australia. 2004-11-03. Retrieved 2009-11-08.
- ↑ "Lieutenant Governor named - Tasmanian Government Media Releases". Media.tas.gov.au. Archived from the original on 15 May 2009. Retrieved 2010-05-16.
- ↑ "Griffiths, Philip Lewis (1881 - 1945) Biographical Entry - Australian Dictionary of Biography Online". Adb.online.anu.edu.au. Retrieved 2010-05-16.
- ↑ "LawAlumni News". Law.utas.edu.au. Retrieved 2010-05-16.
- ↑ "McCracken, Kenneth Gordon". CSIRO. Retrieved 24 May 2012.
- ↑ "Aussies Crawshay and Brennan win double sculls gold - 2008 Beijing Olympic Games - ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)". ABC. Retrieved 2010-05-16.
- ↑ "Permaculture - A Quiet Revolution :: An Interview with Bill Mollison". Scottlondon.com. Retrieved 2010-05-16.
- ↑ Bugg, Damian (21 July 2006). "Bugg Interview". Stateline (Interview). Interview with Airlie Ward. Tasmania]]: ABC TV. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
- ↑ "Former premier to be the next UTAS Chancellor" (Press release). University of Tasmania. 3 July 2012.
- ↑ "Professor Peter Rathjen: Vice-Chancellor". University Council. University of Tasmania. Retrieved 2 March 2015.
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