List of University of Adelaide people

This is an incomplete list of University of Adelaide people including notable alumni and staff associated with the University of Adelaide in Australia.

Alumni

Business

Heads of state

  • Roma Mitchell – Australia's first female judge; its first female Governor 1991–1996
  • Eric Neal – business leader, Governor 1996–2001
  • Mark Oliphant – physicist; Governor 1971–1976
  • Keith Seaman – Uniting Church minister; Governor 1977–1982
  • Hieu Van Le – Lieutenant Governor of South Australia 2007–2014; Governor 2014–present
Australia
All other countries
  • Peter Ong Boon Kwee — Head of the Civil Service, Singapore since 2010,[2][3] the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Finance, Singapore since 2009,[4] and Permanent Secretary with Special Duties in the Prime Minister's Office, Singapore[5]
  • Ong Teng Cheong — 5th President of Singapore (1993–99)[6]
  • Joseph Pairin Kitingan — 7th Chief Minister of Sabah, Malaysia (1985–94)
  • Abdul Taib — 4th Chief Minister of Sarawak, Malaysia (1981–2014); Governor of Sarawak (2014–)
  • Adenan Satem — 5th Chief Minister of Sarawak, Malaysia (2014–present)
  • Tony Tan Keng Yam — 7th President of Singapore (2011–17);[7] Deputy Prime Minister of Singapore (1995–2005[8])
South Australian premiers
  • Lynn Arnold — Premier of South Australia 1992–1993
  • John Bannon — Premier of South Australia 1982–1992
  • Henry Barwell — Premier of South Australia 1920–1924
  • Dean Brown — Premier of South Australia 1993–1996
  • Don Dunstan — Premier of South Australia 1967–1968, and 1970–1979
  • Rob Kerin — Premier of South Australia 2001–2002
  • David Tonkin — Premier of South Australia 1979–1982
  • Jay Weatherill — Premier of South Australia 2011–2018
Other Federal politicians
Other state and territory politicians
  • Adair Blain – Member for the Northern Territory (1934–1949)
  • Pru Goward – Member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly, current minister
  • Peter Malinauskas – South Australian Leader of the Opposition
  • Shane Stone – Chief Minister of the Northern Territory (1995–1999)
  • Ian Wilson – Member for Sturt (1966–1969, 1972–1993), former minister
Other politician figures
  • David Combe – former Secretary of the Australian Labor Party
  • Lynton Crosby – campaign strategist and co-founder of the Crosby Textor Group
  • Lim Soo Hoon – first female Permanent Secretary of Singapore
  • Raymond Lim – Member of Parliament of Singapore (2001–2015), Minister for Transport
  • Parameshwara Gangadharaiah – Deputy Chief Minister of Karnataka
  • Lockwood Smith – Member of the New Zealand Parliament (1984–2013), Speaker of the New Zealand House of Representatives, High Commissioner of New Zealand to the United Kingdom

Public servants

Diplomats
  • Frances Adamson – Australian Ambassador to the People's Republic of China (2011–)
  • Richard Broinowski - Australian Ambassador to Mexico (1994-1997)
  • Walter Crocker – diplomat and writer
  • Maurice de Rohan – South Australian Agent General in London (1998–2006)
  • Tim George – Australian diplomat
  • Ivan Shearer – Member of the United Nations Human Rights Committee,[9] former Dean of Adelaide and Sydney University Law Schools[10]
  • Sim Cheok Lim – Singaporean diplomat[11]
Military
  • Brigadier Arthur Seaforth Blackburn VC, CMG, CBE — soldier and lawyer; awarded the Victoria Cross in 1916[12]
  • Brigadier Andrew Nikolic (see under Politics, Legislators)

Arts

History

Journalism and media

Literature, writing and poetry

Philosophy and theology

Judiciary and the law

  • Amanda Banton - lawyer
  • John Basten – Justice of the New South Wales Court of Appeal
  • Richard Blackburn – former Chief Justice of the Australian Capital Territory
  • Catherine Branson – former President of the Australian Human Rights Commission and Justice of the Federal Court of Australia
  • John Bray – Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia, poet and classicist
  • James Crawford – legal academic; Judge of the International Court of Justice (2014)
  • Bill Denny – Attorney-General of South Australia
  • John Doyle – Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia
  • John Finnis – legal scholar and philosopher
  • Francis Robert Fisher – Judge of the Federal Court of Australia, Vice Chancellor Flinders University
  • Regina Graycar – Emeritus Professor of Law School, University of Sydney
  • Hermann Homburg – Attorney-General of South Australia
  • Elliott Johnston – Communist activist and Justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia
  • Len King – South Australian Attorney-General; Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia
  • Robert Lawson – Attorney-General of South Australia
  • Chris Kourakis – Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia
  • Bruce Lander – South Australia's first Independent Commissioner Against Corruption
  • G. C. Ligertwood – Judge of the Supreme Court of South Australia
  • Brian Martin – Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Northern Territory
  • Robin Millhouse – lawyer, politician, Justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia; Chief Justice of Kiribati and Nauru
  • Roma Mitchell – lawyer, first female Queen's Counsel in Australia (1962); Justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia; first female superior court judge in the British Commonwealth (1965)
  • George Murray – Chief Justice of South Australia
  • Mellis Napier – Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia
  • Rosemary Owens – Dean of Law at the University of Adelaide Law School
  • Angas Parsons – former judge of the Supreme Court of South Australia and former Attorney-General of South Australia
  • Geoffrey Reed – Judge in the Supreme Court of South Australia; the first director-general of ASIO
  • Len Roberts-Smith – former Justice of the Supreme Court of Western Australia
  • Paul Rofe – former South Australian Director of Public Prosecutions
  • Colin Rowe – Attorney-General of South Australia
  • Reginald Rudall – Attorney-General of South Australia
  • Chris Sumner – Attorney-General of South Australia
  • Margaret White – first female judge of the Supreme Court of Queensland

Nobel laureates

  • William Lawrence Bragg — physicist, Nobel laureate with his father (William Henry Bragg) "for their services in the analysis of crystal structure by means of X-rays"[13]
  • Howard Florey — pharmacologist, Nobel laureate (Physiology or Medicine,1945) "for the discovery of penicillin and its curative effect in various infectious diseases"[14]
  • Robin Warren — pathologist, Nobel laureate (Physiology or Medicine, 2005), for the "discovery of the bacterium Helicobacter pylori and its role in gastritis and peptic ulcer disease"

Medicine

Science and mathematics

Sports

Administration

Chancellors

OrderChancellorsTerm startTerm endTime in officeNotes
1Sir Richard Hanson187418761–2 years[19]
2The Rt. Rev'd Augustus Short187618836–7 years
3Sir Samuel Way PC1883191632–33 years
4Sir George Murray KCMG1916194225–26 years
5Sir William Mitchell KCMG194219485–6 years[20]
6Sir Mellis Napier KCMG1948196112–13 years[19]
7Sir George Ligertwood196119664–5 years
8Sir Kenneth Wills KBE, MC, KStJ, ED196619681–2 years[21]
9John Jefferson Bray AC1968198314–15 years[19]
10Dame Roma Mitchell AC, DBE, CVO, QC198319906–7 years
11William Faulding Scammell AO, CBE199119975–6 years
12Bruce Phillip Webb AM199820001–2 years
13Robert Champion de Crespigny AC200020043–4 years
14John von Doussa AO, QC200420105–6 years
15Robert Hill AC201020143–4 years
16Rear Admiral Kevin Scarce AC, CSC, RANR1 December 2014 (2014-12-01)4 May 2020 (2020-05-04)5 years, 155 days[22]
17Catherine Branson AC, QC14 July 2020 (2020-07-14)incumbent203 days[23]

Vice-chancellors

OrderVice-ChancellorsTerm startTerm endTime in officeNotes
1Augustus Short187418761–2 years
2Sir Samuel Way187618836–7 years
3W. Roby Fletcher188318873–4 years
4George Henry Farr188718935–6 years
5John Anderson Hartley189318962–3 years
6William Barlow1896191518–19 years
7Sir George J. R. Murray191519160–1 years
8Sir William Mitchell1916194225–26 years[20]
9Sir H. Angas Parsons194219452–3 years
10J. McKellar Stewart194519482–3 years
11Albert Rowe194819589–10 years
12Sir Henry Basten (né Cohen)195819678–9 years
13Sir Geoffrey Badger196719779–10 years
14Don Stranks197719868–9 years
15Kevin Marjoribanks198719935–6 years
16Gavin Brown199419961–2 years[24]
17Mary O'Kane199720013–4 years
18C. D. Blake200120020–1 years
19 James McWha200220129–10 years
20Warren Bebbington201220174–5 years
21Mike BrooksApril 2017January 20188–9 months[25]
22Peter Rathjen8 January 2018 (2018-01-08)20 July 2020 (2020-07-20)2 years, 194 days[26][27]
23Mike Brooks4 May 2020 (2020-05-04)2 February 2021 (2021-02-02)274 days[28]
24Peter Høj8 February 2021 (2021-02-08)forthcoming−6 days

Faculty

Nobel laureates

Law

Natural sciences

Mathematicians

  • Keith Briggs – mathematician, formerly on the staff of the Physics Department
  • Gavin Brown – mathematician, former vice chancellor of Adelaide and Sydney Universities
  • Charles E. M. Pearce – applied mathematician
  • Renfrey Potts – Adelaide's first professor of applied mathematics
  • George Szekeres – mathematician known for the Erdős–Szekeres theorem
  • Ernie Tuck – applied mathematician
  • Mathai Varghese – pure mathematician, Elder Professor of Mathematics, Australian Laureate Fellow (2018)

Physicists

Medicine

Humanities

Other

References

  1. "Australia's new PM pays tribute to her 'great education'". The University of Adelaide. 24 June 2010.
  2. "Civil Service head Peter Ong says policy makers must be close to the ground". The Straits Times. 26 March 2014. Archived from the original on 27 March 2014.
  3. "New Chairman for the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority (ACRA)" (PDF). Singapore Government. 30 August 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 July 2012. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
  4. "MOF: Organisational Structure". Ministry of Finance, Singapore Government. 2014. Archived from the original on 14 February 2014. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
  5. "Prime Minister's Office: Senior Management & Their Personal Assistants". Singapore Government. 2014. Archived from the original on 26 October 2013.
  6. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 7 August 2011. Retrieved 28 August 2011.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Istana Singapore – former Presidents – Mr Ong Teng Cheong
  7. Channel News Asia : PE: Dr Tony Tan elected Singapore's 7th President
  8. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 13 June 2011. Retrieved 21 June 2011.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) National University of Singapore : Past Presidents and Vice Chancellors — Dr Tony TAN Keng Yam
  9. Discussion on Australian Initiative to Improve the Effectiveness of the United Nations Treaty Committees, Internet Archive copy of Press Conference Interview with Alexander Downer, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Daryl Williams, Attorney-General and Philip Ruddock, Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs, 12.30PM, 5 April 2001, accessed 22 January 2008
  10. Emeritus Professor Ivan Shearer AM RFD Archived 18 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Sydney Law School, The University of Sydney.
  11. Countries/ Regions >Central Asia Archived 6 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine, (Singapore) Ministry of Foreign Affairs, app.mfa.gov.sg Ong Soh Chin, Non-resident envoys keep Singapore plugged in globally, 26 June 2007, Straits Times
    SMS Zainul Abidin Rasheed visits the Republic of Uzbekistan, 24 April 2010, Press release, (Singapore) Ministry of Foreign Affairs; etc.
  12. Blackburn, R.A (1979). "Blackburn, Arthur Seaforth (1892 - 1960)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. 7 (Online ed.). Melbourne: Melbourne University Press. pp. 307–308. Retrieved 23 January 2008.. Blackburn also attended Pulteney Grammar School.
  13. "Lawrence Bragg — Biography". The Nobel Foundation. 1915.
  14. "Sir Howard Florey — Biography". The Nobel Foundation. 1945.
  15. Munni, Tanjina Khan (2012). "Karim, Abdul1". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
  16. "LAWN TENNIS. The Late Dr. A. C. Curtis". The Sydney Morning Herald. 15 September 1933. p. 15. Retrieved 18 April 2015 via National Library of Australia.
    "Lawn Tennis Tournament". Queensland Times, Ipswich Herald & General Advertiser. 1 September 1896. p. 4. Retrieved 18 April 2015 via National Library of Australia.
    "Mr. A. Curtis (the Lawn Tennis Champion)". Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser. 31 July 1897. p. 233. Retrieved 18 April 2015 via National Library of Australia.
  17. "Australia claims record medal haul at world rowing championships after gold in men's quad sculls". www.foxsports.com.au. 3 September 2011. Archived from the original on 7 October 2012. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  18. "Gold medal row for Aussie pair". www.couriermail.com.au. 6 November 2010. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  19. "Former Chancellors". University of Adelaide. 10 January 2018. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
  20. V. A. Edgeloe (1986). "Mitchell, Sir William (1861–1962)". Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  21. David Palmer (2002). "Wills, Sir Kenneth Agnew (1896–1977)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Retrieved 5 April 2010.
  22. "Uni of Adelaide appoints former Governor as 16th Chancellor". adelaide.edu.au. Retrieved 27 May 2016.
  23. "University of Adelaide appoints its 17th Chancellor". Newsroom. University of Adelaide. Retrieved 14 July 2020.
  24. https://www.adelaide.edu.au/uni-collections/collections/UC_VC_Portraits_PRINT.pdf
  25. https://web.archive.org/web/20200210100631/https://www.adelaide.edu.au/provost/
  26. "Professor Peter Rathjen, Vice-Chancellor and President". Office of the Vice-Chancellor and President. University of Adelaide. 2018. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
  27. https://www.theaustralian.com.au/higher-education/university-of-adelaide-in-global-hunt-for-new-vicechancellor-as-talk-of-merger-rekindled/news-story/35a22ef0825ed265b6f7a481c552f630
  28. https://www.adelaide.edu.au/governance/council/uni-council/biographies/
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