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Alison Richard

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
English anthropologist, conservationist and university administrator

Professor
Dame Alison Richard
Vice-Chancellor of theUniversity of Cambridge
In office
2004–2010
Preceded byAlec Broers
Succeeded byLeszek Borysiewicz
Provost ofYale University
In office
1994–2002
Preceded byJudith Rodin
Succeeded bySusan Hockfield
Personal details
Born (1948-03-01)1 March 1948 (age 77)
Bromley, Kent, England
SpouseRobert E. Dewar[1]
ChildrenCharlotte Dewar and Bessie Dewar[1]
Residence(s)Middle Haddam, Connecticut, U.S.
Alma materNewnham College, Cambridge
King's College London
Salary£227,000[2]
Alison Richard Building, Cambridge

Dame Alison Fettes Richard,DBE, DL (born 1 March 1948) is an English anthropologist, conservationist and university administrator. She was the 344thVice-Chancellor of theUniversity of Cambridge,[3] the third Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge since the post became full-time, and the second woman.[4] Before arriving at Cambridge, she served as the provost ofYale University from 1994 to 2002.

Early life

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Alison Richard was born inKent. She attended theQueenswood School and was an undergraduate in Anthropology atNewnham College, Cambridge, before gaining aPhD fromKing's College London in 1973 with a thesis titledSocial organization and ecology ofpropithecus verreaux grandidier.[5]

Research and teaching

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In 1972, she moved toYale University where she taught and continued her research on the ecology and social behavior of wild primates in Central America, West Africa, the Himalayan foothills of Pakistan, and the southern forests of Madagascar. She was named Professor of Anthropology in 1986 and chaired the Department of Anthropology atYale from 1986 to 1990. From 1991 to 1994 she was the Director of Yale'sPeabody Museum of Natural History, which houses one of the world's most important university natural history collections. In 1998 she was named the Franklin Muzzy Crosby Professor of the Human Environment.[6]

Richard is best known for her studies of thesifaka (Propithecus verreauxi), a lemur of southern and western Madagascar. With collaborators and students, she led a program of field observations and the systematic collection of demographic and anatomical data on more than 1000 individually known sifaka from 1984 to the present.[7] This is the longest-running study on wild lemurs and one of the longest running studies of any wild primate. The research has yielded valuable insights into sifaka life-histories, demography, social behavior, and genetics.

In 2022 she published The Sloth Lemur's Song.[8]

University administration

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From 1994 until 2002, she wasProvost of Yale University with operational responsibility for the university's financial and academic programs and planning. From 2003 to 2010, Richard was the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge. During her tenure, she led several major changes in university policy, ranging from intellectual property to undergraduate financial aid, re-organized management of the university's endowment, and expanded Cambridge's global partnerships, most notably in the US, China, India, Singapore, and the Persian Gulf.[9] She launched and completed a billion-pound fund-raising campaign, the largest ever for a UK university.[10]

Conservation

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In the 1970s, in collaboration with RW Sussman (Washington University in St. Louis) and G Ramanantsoa (University of Madagascar), she helped establish a nature reserve at Beza-Mahafaly, southwest Madagascar, which was formally incorporated into the Madagascar Nature Reserve system in 1986.[11]

For more than three decades, she has worked with colleagues to help conserve the reserve's unique natural heritage, sponsor training and research by students from Madagascar and elsewhere, and to enhance socio-economic opportunities for people living in and around the forest. Over the years, these conservation efforts have been funded by the Liz Claiborne Art Ortenberg Foundation,[12]WWF,[11] the Schwartz Foundation,[11] andUSAID.

Advisory boards

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Richard is currently a member of the Boards of theHoward Hughes Medical Institute,[13] and ofWWF International.[14] She serves as an advisor to the Liz Claiborne/Art Ortenberg Foundation, Arcadia Fund, and to the Cambridge Conservation Initiative. She is also chairman of the advisory board of the executive search firm Perrett Laver.

Honours

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Richard was appointedDame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in the 2010 Birthday Honours.[15] In 2005, she was appointed Officier de l'Ordre National in Madagascar.[6]

She has received honorary doctorates from universities in the UK (Edinburgh, Queens University Belfast, Anglia Ruskin, Exeter, Cambridge), China (Peking, Chinese University of Hong Kong), Madagascar (University of Antananarivo), Canada (York), Korea (Ewha Women's University) and the US (Yale), and in 2011 she was made a Fellow ofKing's College, London.[citation needed]

She was awarded the Green Globe Award of the Rainforest Alliance (1998), and theVerrill Medal, Yale University (2008). She was made Deputy Lieutenant of the County of Cambridgeshire in 2004.[16] She is an Honorary Fellow of Lucy Cavendish, Newnham and Wolfson Colleges, University of Cambridge.[citation needed]

Clubs

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She is a member of theAthenaeum Club.[citation needed]

Footnotes

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  1. ^ab"Provost Alison Richard nominated as Cambridge University Vice-Chancellor".31 (13). Yale Bulletin & Calendar. 6 December 2002. Archived fromthe original on 18 April 2009. Retrieved24 March 2009.{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal= (help)
  2. ^Sugden, Joanna (19 March 2009)."Campus fury at vice-chancellors' windfalls".The Times. London, UK. Retrieved3 April 2016.[dead link]
  3. ^"New Vice-Chancellor for Cambridge". University of Cambridge. Archived fromthe original on 3 October 2010. Retrieved6 October 2010.
  4. ^"Cambridge comes calling with 'happening' card".The Telegraph. 10 January 2009. Archived fromthe original on 3 February 2013. Retrieved3 April 2016.
  5. ^"Social organization and ecology of propithecus verreaux grandidier". King's College London Library Catalogue. Retrieved30 November 2012.
  6. ^ab"Alison F. Richard biography". Yale University. Retrieved27 April 2013.
  7. ^J Ratsirarson, J Ranaivonasy, RR Lawler, I Fiorentino, N Rios, AF Richard (2025):Propithecus verreauxi demography spanning 40 years at Bezà Mahafaly Special Reserve, southwest Madagascar.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-024-04230-y.
  8. ^The Sloth Lemur's Song: Madagascar from the Deep Past to the Uncertain Present. University of Chicago Press.
  9. ^"Alison Richard: The quiet revolutionary".The Guardian. London. 31 October 2006. Retrieved27 April 2013.
  10. ^"Cambridge University anniversary campaign tops £1bn". BBC News. 11 June 2010. Retrieved27 April 2013.
  11. ^abcPeter M. Kappeler, David P. Watts (2012):Long-term Field Studies of Primates. Springer.
  12. ^"In Madagascar". The Liz Claiborne and Art Ortenberg Foundation. Archived fromthe original on 24 January 2012. Retrieved27 April 2013.
  13. ^"Trustees". Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Retrieved27 April 2013.
  14. ^"Prof. Alison Richard". WWF. Archived fromthe original on 19 May 2014. Retrieved27 April 2013.
  15. ^"No. 59446".The London Gazette (Supplement). 12 June 2010. p. 6.
  16. ^"Royal aides chosen".Cambridge News. 16 November 2004. Archived fromthe original on 20 December 2013. Retrieved27 April 2013.

See also

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External links

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