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Keynote Speaker: DR JANE GOODALL, DBE
Wednesday 10th August, 14.30 - 15.30pm
Reason for Hope
Dr. Goodall will discuss how her personal values as well as her
sense of kinship with her research subjects became essential aspects
of her research, in terms of her methods of observation, her personal
style of recording data, and her approach to the communication of
her results....descriptions where her own humanity remains in the
picture, and where her values and emotions informed her research
interests and methods of observation and description.....
Biography
Jane Goodall began her landmark study of chimpanzees in Tanzania
in June 1960, under the mentorship of anthropologist and paleontologist
Dr. Louis Leakey. Her work at the Gombe Stream Chimpanzee Reserve
would become the foundation of future primatological research and
redefine the relationship between humans and animals.
In 1977, Goodall established the Jane Goodall Institute
(JGI), which continues the Gombe research and is a global leader
in the effort to protect chimpanzees and their habitats. The Institute
also is widely recognized for establishing innovative, community-centered
conservation and development programs in Africa, and the Roots &
Shoots education program that has 6,000 groups in more than 87 countries.
Dr. Goodall travels an average 300 days per year, speaking
about the threats facing chimpanzees, other environmental crises,
and her reasons for hope that humankind will solve the problems
it has imposed on the earth. She continually urges her audiences
to recognize their personal responsibility and ability to effect
change through consumer action, lifestyle change and activism.
Dr. Goodall's scores of honors include the Medal of Tanzania, the
National Geographic Society's Hubbard Medal, Japan's prestigious
Kyoto Prize, the Prince of Asturias Award for Technical and Scientific
Research 2003, the Benjamin Franklin Medal in Life Science, and
the Gandhi/King Award for Nonviolence. In April 2002 Secretary-General
Annan named Dr. Goodall a United Nations "Messenger of Peace."
In 2004, at a ceremony at Buckingham Palace, Prince Charles invested
Dr. Goodall as a Dame of the British Empire, the female equivalent
of knighthood.
Her list of publications includes two overviews of her work at Gombe
- In the Shadow of Man and Through a Window - as well
as two autobiographies in letters, the best-selling autobiography
Reason for Hope and many children's books. The Chimpanzees
of Gombe: Patterns of Behavior is the definitive scientific
work on chimpanzees and is the culmination of Jane Goodall's scientific
career. She has been the subject of numerous television documentaries
and is featured in the large-screen format film, Jane Goodall's
Wild Chimpanzees (2002). In 2004 she was featured in two Discovery
Channel Animal Planet specials - Return to Gombe and The
State of the Great Ape.
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