This is an incomplete list of Australian National University people, including alumni and staff.
Alumni
Academia
- Robert Addo-Fening, historian and academic
- Des Ball, security specialist and ANU Professor
- Andrew Barker, British classicist
- Joanna Bourke, historian and academic
- Rosi Braidotti, feminist
- Bob Brissenden, poet, novelist, critic and academic
- Harold Brookfield, academic
- Verity Burgmann, academic
- Dipesh Chakrabarty, historian and theorist
- Yang Hi Choe-Wall, Koreanist
- Peter Coutts, archaeologist
- Glyn Davis, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Melbourne since 2005
- John Deeble, Architect of Medicare
- Peter Drysdale, economist
- Alan Dupont, academic
- Stevan Eldred-Grigg, historian and novelist
- Nicholas Evans, linguist
- Alan Finkel, historian
- John Frow, academic
- Bill Gammage, historian
- Ross Garnaut, economist
- Geoffrey Garrett, political scientist, dean of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania[1]
- Alan Gilbert, Vice Chancellor of the University of Melbourne 1996–2004; Vice Chancellor of the University of Manchester 2004–2010
- Malcolm Gillies, Vice-Chancellor of London Metropolitan University
- Nicholas Gruen, economist
- William Hale, academic
- Allan Hawke, diplomat and ANU Chancellor
- Chris Heyde, probabilist
- Brij Lal, historian
- Marcia Langton, anthropologist (BA, ANU), geographer (PhD, Maquarie)
- Donald Laycock, linguist
- Michael McRobbie, President of Indiana University
- Toby Miller, academic
- David Nash, linguist
- Harjot Oberoi, academic
- Patrick O'Farrell, historian
- Diane Pearson, Professor in Environmental Management
- John Quiggin, economist
- Margaret Reeson, historian
- Ralph Regenvanu, anthropologist, artist and politician[2]
- Elizabeth Anne Reid, academic
- Leslie Lloyd Robson, historian
- Michael Roe, historian
- Jessa Rogers, Aboriginal educator
- Leonie Sandercock, academic
- Carmel Schrire, anthropologist
- Bernard Smith, art historian
- Clem Tisdell, economist
- Hrvoje Tkalčić, geophysicist
- Donald Tuzin, social anthropologist
- Tarisi Vunidilo, Fijian archaeologist and curator
- Rolf Zinkernagel, Nobel Prize winning medical researcher
- Pamela Gutman, Burmese art historian
Business
- John Bryant, CEO of Kellogg's
- Cheong Choong Kong, former CEO of Singapore Airlines and current Chairman of OCBC Bank
- Swarnim Wagle, economist from Nepal, worked in World Bank and Asian Development Bank, former vice chairman of National Planning Commission of Nepal
- Chris Corrigan, former CEO of Patrick Corporation and current Chairman of Qube Holdings
Government
Politicians
Prime Ministers of Australia
- Bob Hawke, Prime Minister of Australia 1983–1991 (attended but did not graduate)
- Kevin Rudd, Prime Minister of Australia 2007–2010, 2013
Other federal politicians
- Phil Barresi, Member of the Australian House of Representatives 1996–2007
- Kim Beazley Sr, Member of the Australian House of Representatives 1945–1977; Federal Minister 1972–1975
- Bob Catley, Member of the Australian House of Representatives 1990–1993
- Barry Cohen, Member of the Australian House of Representatives 1969–1990
- Stephen Conroy, Member of the Australian Senate since 2006; Federal Minister 2007–2013
- Craig Emerson, Member of the Australian House of Representatives since 1998; Federal Minister 2007–2013
- Chris Gallus, Member of the Australian House of Representatives 1990–2004
- Concetta Fierravanti-Wells, Member of the Australian Senate since 2005
- Peter Garrett, Member of the Australian House of Representatives since 2004; Federal Minister 2007–2013
- Gary Gray, Member of the Australian House of Representatives since 2007; Federal Minister since 2010–2013
- Alan Griffin, Member of the Australian House of Representatives since 1993; Federal Minister 2007–2010
- Dame Margaret Guilfoyle, Member of the Australian Senate 1971–1987
- Harry Jenkins, Member of the Australian House of Representatives since 1986; Speaker of the House 2008–2011
- Michael Keenan, Member of the Australian House of Representatives since 2004
- John Kerin, Member of the Australian House of Representatives 1972–1993; Federal Minister 1983–1993
- Catherine King, Member of the Australian House of Representatives since 2001; Federal Minister 2013
- Joe Ludwig, Member of the Australian Senate since 1999; Federal Minister 2007–2013
- Brett Mason, Member of the Australian Senate since 1999
- Nick Minchin, Member of the Australian Senate 1993–2011; Federal Minister 1997–2007
- Susan Ryan, Member of the Australian Senate 1975–1988
- Zed Seselja, Member of the Australian Senate since 2013
- Warwick Smith, Member of the Australian House of Representatives 1984–1998; Federal Minister 1996–1998
- Warren Snowdon, Member of the Australian House of Representatives since 1987; Federal Minister 2007–2013
- Alex Somlyay, Member of the Australian House of Representatives 1990–2013; Federal Minister 1997–1998
- Peter White, Member of the Australian House of Representatives 1981–1990
State Premiers and territory Chief Ministers
State Premiers
- Jeff Kennett, Premier of Victoria 1992–1999 (attended but did not graduate)
- Barry O'Farrell, Premier of New South Wales 2011–2014
Territory Chief Ministers
- Andrew Barr, Chief Minister of the Australian Capital Territory since 2014
- Katy Gallagher, Chief Minister of the Australian Capital Territory 2011–2014
- Gary Humphries, Chief Minister of the Australian Capital Territory 2000–2001
- Jon Stanhope, Chief Minister of the Australian Capital Territory 2001–2011
- Shane Stone, Chief Minister of the Northern Territory 1995–1999
Other State and territory politicians
- Michael Pettersson, Member of the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly since 2016
- Alistair Coe, Member of the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly since 2008
- Roslyn Dundas, Member of the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly 2001–2004
- John Hannaford, Member of the New South Wales Legislative Council 1984–2000; State Minister 1990–1995
- Kate Jones, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Queensland 2007–2012; State Minister 2009–2011
- Andrew McIntosh, Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly since 1999
- Michael Moore, Member of the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly 1989–2001
- Shane Rattenbury, Member of the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly since 2008; Speaker of the Assembly 2008–2012
- Chris Steel, Member of the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly since 2016
- Zed Seselja, Member of the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly since 2004; Leader of the Opposition 2007–2013
- Andrew Tink, Member of the New South Wales Legislative Council 1988–2007
- Michael Yabsley, Member of the New South Wales Legislative Council 1984–1994; State Minister 1988–1992
Civil servants
- Glenys Beauchamp, Secretary of the Department of Industry since 2013
- Peter Boxall, Secretary of the Department of Finance 1997–2002
- Stephen Brady, Official Secretary to the Governor-General of Australia since 2008
- Blair Comley, Secretary of the Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency 2011–2013
- Peta Credlin, Chief of Staff to Prime Minister Tony Abbott 2013–2015
- Gordon de Brouwer, Secretary of the Department of the Environment since 2013
- Paul Dibb, Director of the Joint Intelligence Organisation 1986–1988 and Deputy Secretary for Strategy and Intelligence of the Department of Defence 1988–1991
- Bernie Fraser, Secretary of the Australian Treasury 1984–1989
- Paul Grimes, Secretary of the Department of Agriculture since 2013
- Jane Halton, Secretary of the Department of Health (Australia) since 2001
- Stuart Hamilton, Secretary of the Department of Environment 1993–1996
- Allan Hawke, Secretary of the Department of Defence 1999–2002
- Michael Keating, Secretary of the Department of the Prime Minister & Cabinet 1991–1996
- Renée Leon, Secretary of the Department of Employment since 2013
- Bill McLennan, Head of the Australian Bureau of Statistics 1995–2000
- Simon Overland, Chief Commissioner of Victoria Police 2009–2011
- Martin Parkinson, Secretary of the Australian Treasury 2011–2014
- Lisa Paul, Secretary of the Department of Education (Australia) since 2004
- Finn Pratt, Secretary of the Department of Social Services since 2009
- Don Russell, Secretary of the Department of Industry 2011–2013
- Patricia Scott, Secretary of the Department of Communications 2007–2009
- Rod Sims, Chairman of the Australian Competition & Consumer Commission
- Dennis Trewin, Head of the Australian Bureau of Statistics 2000–2007
- Nick Warner, Director-General of the Australian Secret Intelligence Service
Diplomats
- Richard Butler, Permanent Representative of Australia to the United Nations 1992–1996
- Iftekhar Ahmed Chowdhury, Bangladeshi Ambassador to the United Nations 2001–2007; Foreign Minister (2007–2009); Principal Research Fellow, Institute of South Asian Studies [ISAS], National University of Singapore
- Martin Indyk, United States Ambassador to Israel 1995–1997 and 2000–2001
- Sione Ngongo Kioa, Tongan Ambassador to 10 countries
- Cristelle Pratt, Assistant Secretary-General for the Environment and Climate Action, Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States
- Feleti Teo, Secretary General of the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat 2008
- Peter Woolcott, former Australian Ambassador to Italy
- Rathakit Manathat, former Thai Ambassador to China
United Nations officials
- Robert Piper, Regional Humanitarian Coordinator for the Sahel, with the rank of United Nations Assistant Secretary General; founding member of the Doug Anthony Allstars
Foreign officials
- Chirayu Isarangkun Na Ayuthaya, Director of the Crown Property Bureau of Thailand (1987–2018) and the Chief Economic Advisor in the Privy Council of H.M. The King of Thailand (2018–present)
- Chatib Basri, Finance Minister in the Indonesian Government 2013–2014
- Don Brash, Leader of the Opposition in New Zealand 2003–2006, Governor of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand 1988–2002
- Patricia Hewitt, Member of the House of Commons of the United Kingdom 1997–2010; British Minister 2001–2007
- Carlos Jarque, Mexican Government Minister 1995–2000
- Prince Katsura, Member of the Imperial House of Japan
- Gordon Darcy Lilo, Prime Minister of the Solomon Islands since 2011
- Marty Natalegawa, Foreign Minister of Indonesia 2009–2014
- Mari Pangestu, Minister in the Indonesian Government since 2004
- Kuini Speed, Deputy Prime Minister of Fiji 1999–2000
- Teuea Toatu, the Vice-President and Minister for Finance & Economic Development of Kiribati since 2019 and 2016, respectively.
- Damdin Tsogtbaatar, Foreign Minister of Mongolia since 2017
- Jian Yang, Member of the House of Representatives of New Zealand since 2011
Law
Justices of the High Court of Australia
- Stephen Gageler, Chief Justice of Australia since 2023; Justice of the High Court of Australia since 2012; Solicitor-General of Australia 2008–2012
Judges of the Federal Court of Australia
- Tony Whitlam, Judge of the Federal Court of Australia 1993–2005
Judges of the Supreme Courts of Australian states and territories
- Peter Buchanan, Judge of the Supreme Court of Victoria since 1997
- Terence Higgins, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Australian Capital Territory since 2003
- Catherine Holmes, Judge of the Supreme Court of Queensland since 2000
- Geoffrey Nettle, Judge of the Supreme Court of Victoria since 2002
- Janine Pritchard, Judge of the Supreme Court of Western Australia since 2010
President of the Chamber of the Supreme Administrative Court of Thailand
- Rathakit Manathat, President of the Chamber of the Supreme Administrative Court of Thailand since 2022
Federal Magistrates of Australia
- John Pascoe, Chief Federal Magistrate of Australia since 2004
Legal practitioners
- Tupou Draunidalo, Fijian Lawyer
- Jennifer Robinson, human rights and WikiLeaks lawyer; Rhodes Scholar 2006
Law professors
- George Williams, professor at the UNSW Faculty of Law; constitutional law expert
Humanities
Arts
- David Bradbury, filmmaker[3]
- Michael Brand, art scholar
- Ronny Chieng, comedian
- Jim Cotter, composer
- Jessica Cottis, conductor
- Ian Cresswell, composer
- Will Firth, translator
- Hannah Gadsby, comedian
- Alister Grierson, director and scriptwriter
- Nagita Slavina, Indonesian actress
- Geoffrey Lancaster, classical pianist and conductor
- Henry Nixon, actor
- Tim Rogers, musician
- Richard Roxburgh, actor
- Adam Spreadbury-Maher, theatre director and producer
- Katia Tiutiunnik, composer
- Sally Whitwell, ARIA Award-winning pianist
- Nimal Perera, archaeologist, anthropologist and former deputy director (excavation) in Department of Archaeology, Sri Lanka
Journalism and media
- Bettina Arndt, journalist[4]
- Cynthia Banham, journalist and academic
- Alice T. Days, documentary filmmaker
- Toby Hendy, science communicator and YouTuber
- Paul McDermott, comedian and television host
- Stephen Rice, journalist
- Peter Thompson, journalist
Literature, writing and poetry
- Don Aitkin, writer
- Diane Bell, anthropologist, author
- Michael Byrne, poet
- Kevin Hart, poet and literary critic
- Debra Oswald, scriptwriter
- Guy Pearse, author
- Gayla Reid, writer
- Pierre Ryckmans, writer, translator, sinologist
- Brendan Shanahan, author
- David Vernon, writer and sceptic
- Gerard Windsor, author and literary critic
- Vanessa Woods, author
- Shahnon Ahmad, prose writer, Malaysian National Laureate
Military
- Vice Admiral Ray Griggs, Vice Chief of the Defence Force
Sciences
Astronomy
- Jessie Christiansen, exoplanetologist
- Don VandenBerg, astronomer
Biology
- Nerilie Abram, climate scientist
- Leanne Armand, marine scientist
- Ian Brooker, botanist
- Kirsten Parris, urban ecologist
- Susanne von Caemmerer, plant physiologist
Chemistry
- John Shine, biochemist
- Roland Stocker, biochemist
- G. S. R. Subba Rao, bio-organic chemist
Mathematics
- John Coates, mathematician
- Michael Cowling, mathematician
- Peter Hall, statistician
- Adrian Pagan, econometrician
- Charles E. M. Pearce, mathematician
Medicine
- Colin Butler, physician and humanitarian
- Anne Castles, cognitive scientist of reading and language
- Sir William Liley, perinatal physiologist
- Adrian Liston, immunologist
- Rodolfo Llinás, neuroscientist
- Robert Webster, virologist
Physics
- Rodney Jory, physicist
- Ross H. McKenzie, physicist
- Keith Nugent, physicist
Sport
- William Cheung, kung fu practitioner
- David Gallop, CEO of the Football Federation Australia
- Lincoln Hall, mountain climber
- Tal Karp (born 1981), female Australian football (soccer) player
- Stephen Larkham, rugby player, World Cup winner
- Tim Macartney-Snape, mountaineer
Other
- Brian George Farran, bishop
- Bettina Gorton, wife of John Gorton, Prime Minister of Australia (1968–71)
- James Popple, CEO of the Law Council of Australia
- Naomi Rono, World Bank advisor
- Teretia Tokam, women's rights activist
- Andrew Tridgell, computer programmer
- Barbara Vernon, birth activist
- Tom Worthington, computer programmer
Faculty
Notable past and current faculty members include:
- Anthony Irvine Adams, public health physician
- Patrick Atiyah, English barrister and legal writer
- Arthur Llewellyn Basham, South Asian historian
- Michael Barnsley, mathematician and entrepreneur
- Bronwyn Parry, Dean of the College of Arts and Social Sciences
- Larissa Behrendt, academic; Professor of Indigenous Research
- Coral Bell, Senior Research Fellow in International Relations
- David Bensusan-Butt, economist
- Arthur Birch, organic chemist
- Boediono, Indonesian Vice President
- Richard P. Brent, mathematical scientist
- Roderic Broadhurst, criminal justice practitioner, academic, and author
- Miroslav Bukovsky, composer
- Sydney James Butlin, economist, historian
- Chilla Bulbeck, women's studies
- Hedley Bull, Professor of International Relations
- Harvey Raymond Butcher, astronomer
- John Caldwell, demographer
- Yang Hi Choe-Wall, Koreanist
- Manning Clark, historian
- John Coates, mathematician
- John Cockcroft, Nobel Prize- winning nuclear physicist, former chancellor
- H. C. Coombs, economist and public servant
- David P. Craig, research chemist
- Gavan Daws, historian and writer
- Rafe de Crespigny, sinologist
- Robert Dessaix, novelist and essayist
- Paul Dibb, Professor of Strategic Studies and Head of the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre
- Peter C. Doherty, Nobel Prize-winning immunologist
- Thomas K. Donaldson, mathematician
- Robert M. Douglas, medical researcher
- Sir John Eccles, Nobel Prize-winning neurophysiologist
- Fred Emery, social scientist
- Kep Enderby, lawyer and politician
- Denis Evans, physicist and chemist
- Frank Fenner, scientist
- C. P. Fitzgerald, historian
- Michael Flood, sociologist
- Howard Florey, Nobel Prize-winning medical researcher, former chancellor
- Derek Freeman, anthropologist
- Robert Gilbert, polymer chemist
- Peter Godfrey-Smith, philosopher and author of the book Other Minds
- Colin Groves, anthropologist
- Fred Gruen, economist
- Wang Gungwu, specialist in studying the Chinese diaspora
- Sir (William) Keith Hancock, historian
- Peter Firman Harrison, architect and town planner
- Peter Dunstan Hastings, journalist and editor
- Anthony F. Hill, in synthetic, organometallic & coordination chemistry
- A. D. Hope, poet and essayist
- Leonard Huxley, physicist
- Ken Inglis, historian
- Edward A. Irving, geologist
- Zvonimir Janko, mathematician
- Frank Lancaster Jones, sociologist
- Rhys Jones, archaeologist
- James Jupp, political scientist
- Peter Karmel, economist
- Roger Keesing, anthropologist
- Ben Kerkvliet, political scientist
- Brij Lal, historian, novelist and writer of non-fiction
- Geoffrey Lancaster, musicologist and pianist
- Andrew Leigh, economist and federal politician
- Ian McAllister, Irish-Australian public opinion political scientist
- Gavan McCormack, Orientalist
- Helen McGregor, geologist and climate change researcher, a Fellow with the Research School of Earth Sciences
- Brendan McKay, computer scientist
- Warwick McKibbin, economist
- Henry Evans Maude, anthropologist
- Achdiat Karta Mihardja, novelist and writer[5]
- T. B. Millar, historian and political scientists
- John Minford, sinologist and literary translator
- Pat Moran, statistician
- Fred Nadel, anthropologist
- Bernhard Neumann, mathematician
- Hanna Neumann, mathematician, first female professor of mathematics in Australia
- Cliff Ollier, geologist
- Sir Mark Oliphant, physicist and Governor of South Australia
- Sarah Pryke, ecologist
- Lindsay Pryor, botanist
- Leo Radom, research chemist
- Anthony Reid, historian of Southeast Asia
- James Mahmud Rice, sociologist
- Ted Ringwood, geologist
- Malcolm Ross, linguist
- Amin Saikal, political scientist
- Brian P. Schmidt, Nobel Prize winning physicist
- Peter Self, academic
- Thomas Smith, economist
- Allan Snyder, optical physicist, visual scientist
- Oskar Spate, geographer
- Trevor Swan, economist
- Neil Trudinger, mathematician
- Royall Tyler, Japan specialist
- Jonathan Unger, contemporary China specialist
- Michael Vernon, scientist and consumer activist
- Carola Garcia de Vinuesa, Head of the Department of Pathogens and Immunity at the College of Medicine
- Ling Wang (Wang Ling), historian of Chinese science
- Hugh White, Professor of Strategic Studies and Head of the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre
- Jack Waterford, journalist
- Anna Wierzbicka, linguist
Philanthropy
- Phyllis Duguid, teacher, Aboriginal and women's rights advocate.
Administration
Chancellors
| Order | Chair of Interim Council | Term start | Term end | Time in office | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Richard Mills | 1946 | 1951 | 4–5 years | 1 |
- 1 Mills served as Chair of the Interim Council while the University was initially beginning operations. While Bruce was officially the first Chancellor, Mills had been effectively fulfilling the same function.
| Order | Chancellor | Term start | Term end | Time in office | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1st Viscount Bruce of Melbourne CH, MC, PC | 1951 | 1961 | 9–10 years | [6] |
| 2 | Sir John Cockcroft OM, KCB, CBE | 1961 | 1965 | 3–4 years | [7] |
| 3 | Lord Florey OM | 1965 | 1968 | 2–3 years | [8] |
| 4 | Dr. H. C. Coombs | 1968 | 1976 | 7–8 years | [9] |
| 5 | Sir John Crawford AC, KBE | 1976 | 1984 | 7–8 years | [10] |
| 6 | Sir Richard Blackburn OBE | 1984 | 1987 | 2–3 years | [11] |
| 7 | Sir Gordon Jackson AK | 1987 | 1990 | 2–3 years | [12] |
| 8 | Sir Geoffrey Yeend AC, CBE | 1990 | 1994 | 3–4 years | [13] |
| 9 | Peter Baume AC | 1994 | 2006 | 11–12 years | [14] |
| 10 | Allan Hawke AC | 2006 | 31 December 2008 | 1–2 years | [15] |
| 11 | Kim Beazley AC | 1 January 2009 | 31 December 2009 | 1 year, 0 days | [16] |
| 12 | Gareth Evans AC, QC | 1 January 2010 | 31 December 2019 | 10 years, 0 days | [17] |
| 13 | Julie Bishop | 1 January 2020 | incumbent | 4 years, 3 days | [18] |
Vice-Chancellors
| Order | Vice-Chancellor | Term start | Term end | Time in office | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sir Douglas Copland | 11 May 1948 | 1953 | 4–5 years | [19] |
| 2 | Sir Leslie Melville | 1953 | 1960 | 6–7 years | [20] |
| 3 | Sir Leonard Huxley | 30 September 1960 | 1967 | 6–7 years | [21] |
| 4 | Sir John Crawford | 1968 | 1973 | 4–5 years | [10] |
| 5 | Robert Williams | 1973 | 1975 | 1–2 years | |
| 6 | Donald Anthony Low | 1975 | 1982 | 6–7 years | |
| 7 | Peter Karmel | 1982 | 1987 | 4–5 years | [22] |
| 8 | Lawrence Walter Nichol | 1988 | 1993 | 4–5 years | |
| 9 | Deane Terrell | 1994 | 31 December 2000 | 6–7 years | [23] |
| 10 | Ian Chubb | 1 January 2001 | 2011 | 9–10 years | [24] |
| 11 | Ian Young | 2011 | 31 December 2015 | 4–5 years | [25] |
| 12 | Brian Schmidt | 1 January 2016 | 31 December 2023 | 8 years, 3 days | [26] |
| 13 | Genevieve Bell | 1 January 2024 | incumbent | [27] |
References
- ↑ "Geoffrey Garret: DEAN OF THE WHARTON SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA". Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
- ↑ "« Ralph », un anthropologue passionné de politique", Les Nouvelles calédoniennes, 4 September 2008
- ↑ "Frontline Films - Profile: David Bradbury". Archived from the original on 10 March 2011. Retrieved 10 April 2011.
- ↑ McCauley, Dana (30 January 2020). "Health watchdog investigates Bettina Arndt's psychologist title". The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 30 January 2020. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
- ↑ "Obituary: 'Atheist' writer laid to rest in Canberra". The Jakarta Post. 9 July 2010. Archived from the original on 1 October 2012. Retrieved 26 July 2010.
- ↑ Lee, David (2010). Stanley Melbourne Bruce : Australian Internationalist. London: Continuum Press. pp. 179–182. ISBN 978-0-8264-4566-7.
- ↑ "OBITUARY The man who first split atom". The Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 – 1995). National Library of Australia. 19 September 1967. p. 9. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
- ↑ "Lord Howard Florey OM FRS FRCP". About: Our history. Australian National University. n.d. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
- ↑ Nix, Henry. "Coombs, Herbert Cole (Nugget) (1906–1997)]". Obituary at Obituaries Australia. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
- 1 2 Miller, J. D. B. (2007). "Crawford, Sir John Grenfell (Jack) (1910–1984)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Archived from the original on 2 May 2013.
- ↑ "Blackburn Media Release" (PDF) (PDF). Law Society of the Australian Capital Territory. 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 August 2007. Retrieved 1 February 2008.
- ↑ Lee, David (2016). "Jackson, Sir Ronald Gordon (1924–1991)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
- ↑ Kate Carnell, Leader of the Opposition (12 October 1994). "Death of Sir Geoffrey Yeend, AC, CBE" (PDF). Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Australian Capital Territory: Legislative Assembly. pp. 3490–3491. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 May 2013.
- ↑ "Prof Peter Baume receives AC". The Sydney Morning Herald. 9 June 2008. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
- ↑ "A servant to the nation and ANU: Dr Allan Hawke". ANU. 1 September 2022. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
- ↑ "Beazley appointed ANU chancellor". Australia: ABC News. 25 July 2008. Retrieved 23 February 2010.
- ↑ "Professor the Hon Gareth Evans AC QC". About: Governance. The Australian National University. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
- ↑ "The Hon Julie Bishop". About: Governance. The Australian National University. 19 December 2019. Retrieved 10 February 2020.
- ↑ Harper, Marjorie (1993). "Copland, Sir Douglas Berry (1894–1971)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISSN 1833-7538. Archived from the original (First published in hardcopy.) on 7 July 2015.
- ↑ Farquharson, John. "Melville, Sir Leslie Galfreid (1902–2002)". Obituaries Australia. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
- ↑ Crompton, Robert W. "Huxley, Sir Leonard George Holden (1902–1988)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISSN 1833-7538. first published in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 17, (MUP), 2007.
- ↑ Smith, Bridie (3 January 2009). "Karmel's lessons heard". The Age.
- ↑ "Deane Terrell". ANU emeriti oral history video project. Australian National University. 12 November 2012. Archived from the original on 12 April 2018. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
- ↑ "Annual Report 2001". About: Strategic planning. The Australian National University. 2001. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
- ↑ "Ian Young to retire as Vice-Chancellor of ANU in 2016" (Press release). The Australian National University. 4 February 2015. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
- ↑ "Nobel Laureate Brian Schmidt to lead ANU" (Press release). The Australian National University. 24 June 2015. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
- ↑ "ANU announces next VC". reporter.anu.edu.au. Retrieved 27 October 2023.
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