(Redirected from Sir Crispin Tickell)'Sir Crispin Tickell' (born
1930),
GCMG,
KCVO, is a British diplomat, environmentalist and academic. After secondary education at
Westminster School as a King's Scholar, he went to
Christ Church, Oxford, graduating in 1952 with first class honours in Modern History.
[1] He did his national service in the
Coldstream Guards. As a diplomat he was
Chef de Cabinet to the President of the
European Commission (1977-1980),
British Ambassador to Mexico (1981-1983), Permanent Secretary of the
Official Development Assistance (now
Department for International Development) (1984-1987), and British Ambassador to the
United Nations and Permanent Representative on the UN
Security Council (1987-1990).
Sir Crispin was President of the
Royal Geographical Society from 1990 to 1993 and Warden of
Green College, Oxford between 1990 and 1997, where he appointed
George Monbiot and
Norman Myers as Visiting Fellows. From 1996 until August of 2006 he was chancellor of the
University of Kent when
Sir Robert Worcester took over the position . He is currently director of the
Policy Foresight Programme of the
James Martin Institute for Science and Civilization at the
University of Oxford (formerly the Green College Centre for Environmental Policy and Understanding) and Chairman Emeritus of the Climate Institute, in Washington DC. He has many interests, including climate change, population issues, conservation of biodiversity and the early history of the Earth.
He was knighted as a
KCVO in 1983 on the
Royal Yacht Britannia, to mark the conclusion of
Queen Elizabeth's State Visit to Mexico. He was later appointed
GCMG for his work at the UN.
His worldwide status as an authority on climate change is all the more surprising because he has no formal academic training in this area and has formed his opinion by self-teaching.
Tickell helped to write
Margaret Thatcher's speech on global climate change
[2]. He chaired
John Major's Government Panel on Sustainable Development (1994-2000), and was a member of two government task forces under the
Labour Party: one on Urban Regeneration, chaired by Sir Richard Rogers (1998-1999), and one on Potentially Hazardous Near-Earth Objects (2000).
Public Impact
A man of strong environmental convictions, he has been described as influential in Britain, although his environmental message has not always travelled as easily abroad, particularly to the United States. Despite his non-scientific background, he is internationally respected as having a strong grasp of science policy issues. He has been the recipient, between 1990 and 2006, of 23
honorary doctorates[3].
Publications
★ ''Climate Change and World Affairs'', with a preface by
Solly Zuckerman (1977, second edition 1986, Harvard International Affairs Committee).
second edition available online in full
★ ''Mary Anning of Lyme Regis'', with a preface by
John Fowles (1996, 1998 and 2003).
References
1. Crispin Tickell online CV [1] Accessed 2007-04-14
2. Thatcher, Margaret (1995) ''The Downing Street Years'', London: HarperCollins p.640. ISBN 0006383211
3. Crispin Tickell online CV [2] Accessed 2007-04-14
External links
★
Archive of his works