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2004 FENNER CONFERENCE ON THE ENVIRONMENT
Understanding the populationenvironment debate: Bridging disciplinary divides
The Shine Dome, Canberra, 24-25 May 2004
Frank Fenner
Born in Ballarat in 1914, Fenner graduated
MB BS in the University of Adelaide in 1938, and was awarded the degree
of MD in 1942, for papers on the physical anthropology of Australian aborigines.
He served in the Royal Australian Army Medical Corps from 1940 to 1946,
and in 1945 was awarded an MBE for his work in malaria control in New
Guinea. After the war he worked for brief periods with Sir Macfarlane
Burnet and Dr René Dubos, and in 1949 was appointed Professor of
Microbiology in the John Curtin School of Medical Research, Australian
National University. From 1967 until 1973 he was Director of the John
Curtin School, and from 1973-79 Director of the Centre of Resource and
Environmental Studies in the Australian National University. After official
retirement at the end of 1979 he was appointed a visiting fellow in the
John Curtin School of Medical Research, a position which he still occupies.
In 1976 he was made a CMG for contributions to medical research and in
1989 he was awarded the AC for his contributions to preventive medicine.
His principal research
work has been concerned with poxviruses: mousepox, myxomatosis, vaccinia
genetics and smallpox, and his writing with poxviruses, animal virology,
smallpox eradication, environmental problems and the history of science.
He has published some 300 scientific papers and been editor of four books
and sole author or coauthor of 14 books. Since 1965 he has been a member
of the World Health Organization Expert Advisory Panel on Virus Diseases,
and from 1969 onwards he was associated with the Intensified Smallpox
Eradication Programme of the World Health Organization, being Chairman
of the Global Commission for the Certification of Smallpox Eradication
from 1977 to 1979 and Chairman of the Committee on Orthopoxvirus Infections
from 1980 to 1985 and at its meetings as an Ad Hoc Committee in 1986,
1990 and 1994. In 1988 he shared the Japan Prize (Preventive Medicine)
with Dr D.A. Henderson (USA) and Dr I. Arita (Japan) for work on smallpox
eradication.
He was elected a
Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science in 1954, and gave its Flinders
Lecture in 1967 and Burnet Lecture in 1985. He was elected a Fellow of
the Royal Society of London in 1958, and gave its Leuwenhoek Lecture in
1961 and Florey Lecture in 1983, and was awarded the Copley Medal in 1995.
He was elected a Foreign Associate of the US National Academy of Sciences
in 1977, and he has honorary doctorates from Monash, Liège, Oxford
Brookes and The Australian National Universities. He received the Albert
Einstein World Award of Science, 2000, the Clunies Ross Science and Technology
Lifetime Award, 2002, the Prime Minister’s Prize for Science, 2002
and ACT Australian of the Year 2003. |