A list of University of Queensland people, the University of Queensland has numerous notable alumni and faculty.
Notable alumni
Academia
- Jock R. Anderson, agricultural economist at the World Bank; emeritus professor at the University of New England
 - Paul Brindley (biologist), professor of microbiology, immunology, and tropical medicine at George Washington University
 - Joy Wolfram, nanoscientist.
 - Edward Byrne, Principal of King's College London; Vice-Chancellor of Monash University
 - Colin Clark, economist
 - Paul A. Cobine, biologist, Chair of Department of Biological Sciences at Auburn University
 - Raymond Dart, anatomist and anthropologist, who discovered the first fossil of an Australopithecus africanus
 - Peter C. Doherty, immunologist, Nobel Prize recipient and former Australian of the Year
 - Joshua Gans, economist
 - Sam Hawgood, Chancellor of University of California, San Francisco
 - Philip Hogg, Head of ACRF Centenary Cancer Research Center at the Centenary Institute
 - Dorothy Hill, palaeontologist, who was described as the "most distinguished scholar of the first 75 years of the University of Queensland"[1]
 - Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, biologist and climate scientist known as a leading in the effects of climate change on coral reefs
 - Donald Markwell, social scientist and Warden of Rhodes House
 - Michael McRobbie, 18th President of Indiana University
 - Dirk Moses, historian, professor of modern history at the University of Sydney, widely regarded as a leading expert on the history of genocide and ethnic cleansing, and on the history of colonialism.
 - Adrian Pagan, economist
 - James Page, educationist
 - A. W. Pryor, physicist
 - Chandreshekhar Sonwane, Indian American Scientist
 - Professor Paul Thomas AM, founding Vice-Chancellor of University of the Sunshine Coast
 - Colin Murray Turbayne, Professor of Philosophy at University of Rochester and internationally recognized scholar on the works of George Berkeley.[2]
 - Chelsea Watego, Indigenous health researcher
 - Frank T. M. White, Foundation Professor, Mining and Metallurgical Engineering, University of Queensland; Macdonald Professor of Mining Engineering and Applied Geophysics, McGill University
 - Franklin White, public health scientist focused on capacity building for international and global health
 - Craig Steven Wright, computer scientist, one of the possible inventors of the Bitcoin digital currency.
 
- Patsy Yates, registered nurse specialized in palliative care, Distinguished Professor and Executive Dean of the Faculty of Health, Queensland University of Technology (Brisbane)
 
Arts
- Thea Astley, writer and four times winner of the Miles Franklin Award
 - Jennifer Bacia, novelist
 - John Birmingham, novelist
 - Bille Brown, actor and playwright
 - Ross Clark, poet
 - Nick Earls, novelist
 - Janet Fielding, actress
 - Janet Fletcher, linguist
 - Matt Granfield, writer
 - Steven Herrick, writer
 - Janette Turner Hospital, writer
 - Bronwyn Lea, poet
 - David Malouf, writer
 - Geoffrey Rush, actor and Academy Award recipient
 - Karin Schaupp, guitarist
 - Joseph Twist, composer
 - Kim Wilkins, writer
 - Madhan Karky, writer, lyrics writer India
 - Astrid Jorgensen, musician
 
Business
- Richard Goodmanson, former COO of Dupont; Board of Qantas
 - Sir Ronald Gordon Jackson AK, businessman
 - Andrew N. Liveris, CEO of Dow Chemical Company, second largest chemical manufacturer in the world
 - Mark Hutchinson, former CEO of GE Europe
 - Vaine Nooana-Arioka, Executive Director of the Bank of the Cook Islands
 
Judicial
- Sir Gerard Brennan, former Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia
 - Ian Callinan, former Justice of the High Court of Australia
 - Sir Walter Campbell, former Governor of Queensland and Chief Justice of Queensland
 - Clare Foley, lawyer
 - Paul de Jersey, former Chief Justice of Queensland
 - Sir Harry Gibbs, former Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia
 - Sir Mostyn Hanger, former Chief Justice of Queensland
 - Stanley Jones, Justice of the Supreme Court of Queensland
 - Susan Kiefel, Justice of the High Court of Australia
 - Sir Buri Kidu, former Chief Justice of Papua New Guinea
 - Margaret McMurdo, President of the Queensland Court of Appeal
 - Sir Noel Power, Vice-President of the Hong Kong Court of Appeal (Acting Chief Justice 1996–1997)
 - Russell Skerman, Justice of the Supreme Court of Queensland
 - Sir William Webb, former Justice of the High Court of Australia and President of the International Military Tribunal for the Far East
 
Media
- Tim Arvier, Nine News Queensland state political reporter and former US correspondent
 - Robert Bell, host of the Channel 10 programme Scope
 - Tracey Challenor, former journalist with Seven News
 - Melissa Downes, weekday co-presenter of Nine News Queensland
 - Heather Foord, former journalist with Nine News Queensland
 - Sylvia Jeffreys, news presenter on Today
 - George Negus, author and journalist
 - Andrew Olle, television and radio presenter (ABC, Nine Network), dropped out after the first year[3][4]
 - Cameron Price, former reporter for Nine News Queensland and Seven News Sydney
 - Ben Roberts-Smith, former general manager of Seven Brisbane and former Australian soldier
 - Michael Ware, journalist, war correspondent
 - Lis Wiehl, author and television legal analyst
 - Marian Wilkinson, Walkley award winning journalist
 
Medicine
- Graham Colditz, chronic disease epidemiologist, one of the global top three most cited academics
 - Michael Gabbett, clinical geneticist
 - Adele Green, epidemiologist
 - Jian Zhou, co-inventor of Gardasil
 - Mary Mahoney, medical practitioner and academic
 
Military
- General Peter Gration, former Chief of the Defence Force and Chief of the General Staff
 - Major General rtd Jim Molan
 - Australian war criminal Ben Roberts-Smith
 
Politics
Premiers
- Michael Ahern, Premier of Queensland 1987–1989
 - Peter Beattie, Premier of Queensland 1998–2007
 - Anna Bligh, Premier of Queensland 2007–2012, first female Premier
 - Wayne Goss, Premier of Queensland 1989–1996
 - Campbell Newman, Lord Mayor of Brisbane 2004–2011; Premier of Queensland 2012–2015
 - Steven Miles, Premier of Queensland 2023–present
 - Annastacia Palaszczuk, Premier of Queensland 2015–2023
 - Mark McGowan, Premier of Western Australia 2017–2023
 
State Members of Parliament
- Evan Moorhead, former member for the Electoral district of Waterford; former Secretary of the Australian Labor Party in Queensland
 - Curtis Pitt, Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Queensland
 - Cameron Dick, Treasurer and Minister for Investment; State Member for Woodridge
 - Stirling Hinchliffe, Minister for Local Government; State member for Sandgate
 - Anthony Lynham, Minister for Natural Resources, Mines and Energy; State member for Stafford
 - Mark Ryan, Minister for Police; State member for Morayfield
 
Federal Members of Parliament
- George Brandis, former Senator for Queensland
 - Trevor Evans, former Member of the Australian House of Representatives for Brisbane
 - Garth Hamilton, current Member of the Australian House of Representatives for Groom
 - Bob Katter, current Member of the Australian Parliament for Kennedy and leader of Katter's Australian Party
 - Chris Ketter, former Senator for Queensland
 - Michael Macklin, Australian Democrat Senator elected while a staff member at UQ
 - Clive Palmer, leader of the Palmer United Party; former member for Fairfax
 - Wyatt Roy, youngest ever politician elected to Australian Parliament; former MP for Longman (failed to complete his undergraduate degree)
 - Wayne Swan, former Treasurer of Australia and Deputy Prime Minister
 - Murray Watt, Senator for Queensland; Former state member for Everton
 
Local Government
- Sallyanne Atkinson, politician and first female Lord Mayor of Brisbane
 
Outside Australia
- Ernest Aderman, Member of Parliament in New Zealand[5]
 - Prof. Ranjith Bandara, Member of Parliament in Sri Lanka
 - Tan Sri Khalid Ibrahim, 14th Chief Minister of Selangor, Malaysia
 - Ludwig Keke, Nauruan politician, Member of Parliament (1968–1972, 1989–1995, 1997–2000), Speaker of Parliament (1998–2000), and Ambassador to Taiwan (2007–2016)[6]
 - Taneti Maamau, current President of Kiribati.
 - Ahmed Shaheed, former Maldives Minister of Foreign Affairs and former Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in Iran
 - Lee Boon Yang, former Singaporean Cabinet Minister
 
Public service
- Elisabeth Bowes, diplomat and trade policy advisor
 - Francis Patrick Donovan, diplomat and jurist
 - Max Moore-Wilton, former head of the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet
 
Sport
- Natalie Cook, Olympic gold medallist, beach volleyball
 - John Eales, former rugby union captain
 - Thomas Lawton, former rugby union captain, Waratah Rugby Player, Oxford Blue
 - Mark Loane, former rugby union captain
 - Michael Lynagh, former rugby union captain
 - Greg Martin, former rugby union player and rugby commentator
 - Lloyd McDermott, first Aboriginal person to represent Australia in Rugby Union, and the nation's first indigenous barrister
 - John Roe, former Queensland rugby union captain
 - Nathan Sharpe, former rugby union captain
 - Lev Susany, powerlifter and Commonwealth record holder
 - David Theile, Olympic medallist in swimming
 - Clem Windsor, former rugby union player
 
Vice Regal
Those listed here may also be listed elsewhere, notably Politics and Public Service.
- Quentin Bryce, Governor-General of Australia 2008–2014
 - Sir Walter Campbell, former Governor of Queensland and Chief Justice of Queensland
 - Leneen Forde, Governor of Queensland 1992–1997
 - Peter Arnison, Governor of Queensland
 - Bill Hayden, Governor-General of Australia 1989–1996, Foreign Minister, Federal Treasurer and Federal Opposition Leader
 - Penelope Wensley, Governor of Queensland 2008–2014
 - Paul de Jersey, Governor of Queensland 2014–2021
 
Other
- Aila Inkero Keto, conservationist; recognized in the United Nations Environment Program's Global 500 Roll of Honour 1988
 - Elizabeth Powell, scientist
 - Lilla Watson, Indigenous Australian activist, visual artist and academic
 - Ken Ham, creationist; founder of Answers in Genesis and the Creation Museum
 - Karen Gallman, Miss Intercontinental 2018
 - Chang-Han Yeh, architecture student
 - Hau Wai Glady Hsiao, architecture student; master of Overwatch
 
Notable past and present staff
- Freda Bage, biology lecturer and first principal of The Women's College at UQ
 - Dana Bergstrom, senior lecturer in ecology and botany, Antarctic researcher
 - Quentin Bryce, former Governor of Queensland, former Governor-General of Australia, law lecturer at UQ
 - Kathleen Campbell-Brown, French lecturer at UQ
 - Christina Cho, Adjunct Professor in architecture, a director of Cox Architecture
 - Raphael Cilento, honorary professor of medicine
 - Colin Clark, economist
 - Cyril John Connell, former registrar
 - Sir Zelman Cowen, former vice-chancellor, former Governor-General of Australia, Privy Councillor
 - Margaret Cribb, government and political science lecturer
 - Frank Cumbrae-Stewart, founding registrar and librarian and Professor of Law at UQ
 - Robert Elson, historian
 - Robert Endean, marine biologist
 - Michael Scott Fletcher, foundation master of King's College and Professor of Philosophy at UQ
 - Elwyn Flint, Senior lecturer, linguist
 - Josephine Forbes, Professor of Medicine
 - Ian Frazer, virologist and former Australian of the Year
 - Mary Garson, chemist
 - Alexander James Gibson, first Professor of Engineering at UQ
 - Robert Gilbert, chemist
 - Ernest James Goddard, Professor of Biology at UQ
 - John Harsanyi, Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, UQ economics lecturer 1954
 - Roger Hawken, Professor of Engineering
 - Dorothy Hill, palaeontologist, and the first female professor appointed at an Australian university, and first female President of the Professorial Board
 - Rodney Huddleston, linguist
 - Jolanda Jetten, social psychologist
 - Thomas Harvey Johnston, Professor of Biology at UQ
 - Lewis Keeble, former President of both the Royal Town Planning Institute (UK) and the Planning Institute of Australia
 - Michael Lattke, religious studies
 - Elton Mayo, first Professor of Philosophy at UQ
 - Neal Menzies, former Vice-President of the International Union of Soil Sciences
 - John Lundie Michie, first Professor of Classics at UQ
 - John Moorhead, historian
 - Donald Nicklin, retired Professor of Chemical Engineering and Pro Vice Chancellor for Physical Sciences
 - Michael Nielsen, Quantum physicist, formerly at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
 - Thomas Parnell, first Professor of Physics at UQ, who started the Pitch Drop experiment
 - Elizabeth Powell, Director, Centre for Liver Disease Research
 - Henry Priestley (mathematician), first Professor of Mathematics at UQ
 - Hugh Possingham, conservation biologist
 - John Quiggin, economist
 - Suri Ratnapala, law
 - Henry Caselli Richards, first Professor of Geology at UQ
 - Frederick Walter Robinson, founder of UQ's Fryer Library
 - Dorothea Sandars, parasitologist
 - Fred Schonell, Founding Professor of Education and Vice-Chancellor
 - Jeremiah Joseph Stable, first Professor of English at UQ
 - Bertram Steele, first Professor of Chemistry at UQ
 - Roland Sussex, linguist
 - Clem Tisdell, economist
 - Graeme Turner, President of the Australian Academy of the Humanities
 - Joseph Twist, composer
 - Hermiene Ulrich, first female lecturer at UQ
 - Lilla Watson, Indigenous Australian activist, visual artist and academic
 - Frank T. M. White, Founding Professor of Mining and Metallurgical Engineering
 - Ghil'ad Zuckermann, linguist, revivalist, President of the Australian Association for Jewish Studies
 
Administration
Chancellors
- 1910 – 1915 – Sir William MacGregor
 - 1915 – 1922 – Sir Pope Alexander Cooper
 - 1922 – 1925 – Lt-Col. Sir Matthew Nathan
 - 1925 – 1927 – Andrew Joseph Thynne
 - 1927 – 1944 – Sir James Blair
 - 1944 – 1953 – William Forgan Smith
 - 1953 – 1957 – Otto Hirschfeld
 - 1957 – 1966 – Sir Albert Axon
 - 1966 – 1976 – Sir Alan Mansfield
 - 1977 – 1985 – Sir Walter Campbell
 - 1985 – 1992 – Sir James Foots
 - 1993 – 2009 – Sir Llewellyn Edwards
 - 2009 – 2015 – John Story
 - 2016 – 2016 – Jane Wilson (Acting)
 - 2016–present – Peter Varghese
 
Vice Chancellors
- 1910 – 1916 – Reginald Heber Roe
 - 1916 – 1925 – Andrew Joseph Thynne
 - 1925 – 1938 – William Nathaniel Robertson
 - 1938 – 1959 – John Douglas Story
 - 1960 – 1969 – Sir Fred Schonell
 - 1970 – 1977 – Sir Zelman Cowen
 - 1979 – 1996 – Brian Wilson, Australia's longest serving Vice-Chancellor[7]
 - 1996 – 2007 – John A. Hay
 - 2008 – 2012 – Paul Greenfield
 - 2012 – 2012 – Deborah Terry (Acting)
 - 2012 – 2020 – Peter Høj
 - 2020–present – Deborah Terry
 
See also
- Category:University of Queensland alumni
 - University of Queensland Union (UQU)
 
References
- ↑ Thomis, Malcolm I. (1 January 1985). "A place of light & learning: the University of Queensland's first seventy-five years". espace.library.uq.edu.au. Archived from the original on 23 April 2016. Retrieved 24 March 2016.
 - ↑ Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers Shook, John. 2005 Biography of Colin Murray Turbayne on Google Books
 - ↑ Masters, Chris (2019). "John Andrew Olle (1947–1995)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 19 November 2023.
 - ↑ Hawley, Janet (16 May 1992). "The Hidden Parts of Andrew Olle". Sydney Morning Herald (Good Weekend). pp. 26–33.
 - ↑ Gustafson, Barry (1986). The First 50 Years : A History of the New Zealand National Party. Auckland: Reed Methuen. p. 296. ISBN 0-474-00177-6.
 - ↑ "People". Pacific Islands Monthly (10): 35–36. 1 August 1981.
 - ↑ Australia's longest-serving Vice-Chancellor among honorary degree recipients, UQ News, 12 December 1995
 
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