List of Monash University people
A list of Monash University people, including a number of notable alumni and staff.
Notable alumni
Politics and government
- Daniel Andrews – 48th Premier of Victoria
- Kevin Andrews – former Australian Defence Minister
- Louise Asher – former Deputy Leader of the Victorian Liberal Party
- Jim Bacon – former Premier of Tasmania (did not graduate)
- Adam Bandt – Federal Member of Parliament for the Australian Greens; first Green elected to Federal Parliament at a general election
- Boediono – former Vice President of Indonesia
- Sue Boyce – Australian Senator
- Andrew Brideson – former Member of the Parliament of Victoria
- Helen Buckingham – former Member of the Parliament of Victoria
- Anna Burke – politician, former Deputy Speaker of the Australian House of Representatives
- Elaine Carbines – former Member of the Parliament of Victoria
- Peter Cleeland – former Member of the Australian House of Representatives
- Jacinta Collins – Australian Senator
- Ann Corcoran – Member of the Australian House of Representatives
- Peter Costello – longest-serving Treasurer of Australia; former Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party of Australia
- Simon Crean – Australian Minister for Trade; former Leader of the Opposition and Leader of the ALP
- David de Kretser – medical researcher; former Governor of Victoria
- John Delzoppo – former Speaker of the Parliament of Victoria
- Richard Di Natale – Leader of the Australian Greens, Senator for Victoria
- Robert Doyle – former Leader of the Opposition in Victoria and Leader of the Victorian Liberal Party; former Lord Mayor of Melbourne
- John Elferink – Northern Territory Shadow Treasurer
- Peter Falconer – Member of the Australian House of Representatives
- David Feeney – Member of the Australian House of Representatives
- Jeannie Ferris – Australian Senator
- Gail Gago – South Australian Minister for Environment, Conservation and Mental Health
- James Gomez – Singaporean politician and academic at Monash
- Alan Griffiths – former Australian Minister for Industry and Resources
- Peter Hall – Member of the Parliament of Victoria
- Alistair Harkness – Member of the Parliament of Victoria, political commentator
- Carolyn Hirsh – former Member of the Parliament of Victoria
- Rob Hudson – Member of the Parliament of Victoria
- Dennis Jensen – Member of the Australian House of Representatives
- Gary Johns – former Special Minister of State, academic
- Michael Kroger – Liberal Party of Australia powerbroker and businessman
- Norman Lacy – former Minister for Arts and Minister for Educational Services
- Albert Langer – political activist
- John Langmore – former Member of the Australian House of Representatives; Director of Social Policy and Development at the United Nations; academic
- John Lenders – Victorian Treasurer; Victoria's longest-serving Finance Minister
- Lim Guan Eng – Malaysian politician; current Finance Minister of Malaysia
- Hong Lim – Member of the Parliament of Victoria
- Tony Lupton – Member of the Parliament of Victoria; Secretary of Cabinet under John Brumby
- Julian McGauran – Former Australian Senator
- Marlene Moses – diplomat, Foreign Minister of Nauru
- Lauren Moss – Member of the Northern Territory Parliament
- Simbarashe Mumbengegwi – Foreign Minister of Zimbabwe
- Janice Munt – Member of the Parliament of Victoria
- Brendan O'Connor – former Australian Minister for Home Affairs and Employment, now Opposition Cabinet member
- Gavan O'Connor – former Member of the Australian House of Representatives
- Neil O'Keefe – former Member of the Australian House of Representatives
- Clare O'Neil – Member of the Australian House of Representatives for Hotham; former Mayor of the City of Greater Dandenong; youngest female mayor in Australian history
- Martin Pakula – Attorney General of Victoria
- John Pandazopoulos – former Victorian Minister for Employment and Major Projects
- Kay Patterson – former Australian Senator; former Minister for Health
- Chris Pearce – Member of the Australian House of Representatives
- Sue Pennicuik – Greens Member of the Parliament of Victoria
- Victor Perton – former Member of the Parliament of Victoria
- Inga Peulich – Member of the Parliament of Victoria
- Robert Ray – Australian Senator; former Defence Minister
- Peter Reith – Executive Director of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development; former Defence Minister; former Minister for Workplace Relations
- Gordon Rich-Phillips – Shadow Victorian Finance Minister
- Tony Robinson – Victorian Minister for Consumer Affairs and Gaming
- Bill Shorten – Federal Opposition leader, Member of the Australian House of Representatives; former National Secretary of the Australian Workers' Union; President of the Victorian ALP
- Helen Silver – public servant; Secretary of the Victorian Department of Premier and Cabinet
- Adem Somyurek – Member of the Parliament of Victoria
- Sharman Stone – former Australian Minister for Workforce Participation, former Shadow Minister for Immigration
- Kirsty Sword Gusmão – political activist; former first lady of East Timor
- Murray Thompson – Member of the Parliament of Victoria
- John Thwaites – former Deputy Premier of Victoria; Minister for Environment, Water and Climate Change
- David Vigor – Australian Senator
- Nick Wakeling – Member of the Parliament of Victoria
- Don Watson – speechwriter to Paul Keating, author
- Graeme Weideman – former Victorian Minister for Tourism
- Dean Wells – former Attorney-General of Queensland; Minister for Education and Minister for the Environment
- Steve Wettenhall – Member of the Parliament of Queensland
- Greg Wilton (1955–2000) – Member of the Australian House of Representatives
- Michael Wooldridge – former Australian Minister for Health and Chairman of UNAIDS
Law
- Greg Barns – barrister and political commentator
- Kevin Bell – Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria; current President of the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT)
- Diana Bryant – current Chief Justice of the Family Court of Australia
- Julian Burnside, QC – high-profile barrister; human rights advocate; author; one of the Australian Living Treasures
- Paul Cronin – Justice of the Family Court of Australia
- Tom Danos – high-profile barrister; Treasurer of the Victorian Criminal Bar Association; defence lawyer in the Keith William Allan murder trial
- Raymond Finkelstein – Justice of the Federal Court of Australia
- Ian Gray – current Chief Magistrate, Magistrates' Court of Victoria
- Felicity Hampel – human rights lawyer; Judge of the County Court of Victoria
- Peter Hayes QC – high-profile barrister
- Peter Hogg – constitutional law scholar
- Graeme Johnstone – current State Coroner of Victoria
- Murray Kellam – Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria;first President of VCAT
- Ron McCallum - legal scholar specialising in industrial law
- Francine McNiff – legal scholar, and first woman state magistrate in Victoria[1]
- Lex Lasry QC – high-profile barrister, Chairman of the Victorian Criminal Bar Association; human rights advocate; Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria
- Stuart Morris – Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria; former President of VCAT
- Ross Ray – current President of the Law Council of Australia
- Neil Rees – current Chairman of the Victorian Law Reform Commission; foundation Dean of the University of Newcastle Law School
- Michael Rozenes – current Chief Judge of the County Court of Victoria
- Pamela Tate – current Solicitor-General of Victoria
- Mark Weinberg – Justice of the Federal Court of Australia; former Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions; current Chief Justice of Norfolk Island
Media and arts
- Rory Barnes – novelist
- Jean Bedford – novelist
- Peter Bonner – artist, winner of the Dobell Prize
- Damien Broderick – author, futurist
- Peter Carey – Booker prize-winning novelist
- Nick Cave – musician
- Doug Chappel – comedian actor
- Tim Charles – musician
- Timothy Conigrave (1959–1994) – actor and writer
- Peter Corris – crime fiction author
- Dagmar Evelyn Cyrulla - artist
- Andrew Daddo – actor, voice artist, author and television personality
- Cecilia Dart-Thornton – author
- Lindy Davies – actor; Dean of the Victorian College of Arts
- Cherie Ditcham – actress, model
- Laurie Duggan – poet
- Hazel Edwards – children's author
- Jon Faine – Melbourne radio personality
- Phillip Frazer – publisher
- Max Gillies – actor and satirist
- Andy Griffiths – children's author
- John Griffiths – musician and musicologist
- Yalda Hakim – journalist
- Mark Holden – singer, actor, television personality and barrister
- Leslie Howard – pianist and composer
- Russel Howcroft – advertiser, media personality and Executive general manager of Network Ten
- Paul Jennings – children's author
- Adib Khan – novelist
- Lucy Kiraly – fashion model and television presenter
- Michael Leunig – cartoonist
- Campbell McComas – comedian and actor
- Brenda Niall – author
- Nikolai Nikolaeff – actor
- Eva Orner – Academy-Award-winning film producer
- Boyd Oxlade – author of Death in Brunswick
- Charlie Pickering – comedian
- Ben Quilty – artist
- Apsara Reddy – journalist
- John Romeril – playwright
- Raghav Sachar – Indian singer songwriter
- John A. Scott – poet
- Fiona Spence – actress, star of Prisoner
- Jo Stanley – radio personality
- Stelarc – performance artist
- Yumi Stynes – radio and television personality
- Lucy Sussex – author
- Matt Tilley – comedian
- Mary Tonkin – artist, winner of the Dobell Prize
- Don Watson – author
- Alan Wearne – poet
- Ilka White – textile artist
- David Williamson – playwright
- Shaun Wilson – artist
- Wendy Zukerman – podcast personality, science journalist[2]
Business
- Fiona Balfour – businesswoman, former Qantas and Telstra executive
- John F. O. Bilson – economist
- Mark Birrell – company director; former Minister for Industry, Science and Technology
- Tony D'Aloisio – Chairman, Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC); former CEO, Australian Securities Exchange (ASX)
- Henry Ergas – economist
- John A. Fraser – Chairman and CEO of Global Asset Management at UBS AG; former Deputy Secretary of the Australian Treasury
- Josh Frydenberg – banker and political aspirant
- Peter Ivany – media mogul and billionaire
- Margaret Jackson – first female Chairman of Qantas
- Ruslan Kogan – founder and CEO of Australia's biggest online retailer Kogan.com; co-founder of Milan Direct
- Michael Kroger – Liberal Party of Australia powerbroker and businessman
- Tan Le – technology businesswoman, Young Australian of the Year
- Peter Lew – businessman
- Michael Luscombe – CEO and managing director, Woolworths Limited
- Ian Macfarlane – economist, Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia (1996–2006)
- Paresh Narayan – economist
- Trevor O'Hoy – President and CEO, Foster's Group
- Pasuk Phongpaichit – economist, author, anti-corruption campaigner; recipient of the 1999/2000 Monash University Distinguished Alumni Award
- Peter Reith – Executive Director of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
- Gary P. Sampson – WTO economist
- Graeme Samuel – Chairman of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC)
- Anna Skarbek – businesswoman and former investment banker
- Jannie Tay – Executive vice-chairman and co-founder of the Hour Glass; recipient of the 2003 Monash University Distinguished Alumni Award
Medicine and science
- Yahya Awang – cardiothoracic surgeon; performed the first heart transplant in Malaysia
- Greg Ayers – atmospheric scientist, Director of the Australian Bureau of Meteorology
- David Brown – meteorologist, Seven News weatherman
- Michael Cowley – physiologist, Australian Science Minister's Life Scientist of the Year 2009
- David de Kretser – medical researcher, former Governor of Victoria
- Weary Dunlop – military surgeon, World War II leader (attended the Victorian College of Pharmacy, now Monash Parkville Campus)
- Ian G. Enting – mathematician
- Tim Flannery – biologist, author, 2007 Australian of the Year
- Andrew Freeman FACS – Fellow of the Australian Computer Society (elected in 1997), and an Honorary Life Member (HLM) of the ACS (elected in 2018)[3]
- Kristine French – plant biologist and conservationist
- Susan Lim – surgeon, performed Singapore's first successful liver transplant; recipient of the 2005 Monash University Distinguished Alumni Award
- John Mattick – Executive Director of the Garvan Institute of Medical Research in Sydney, whose research led to the discovery of the function of non-coding DNA
- Patrick McGorry – psychiatrist, 2010 Australian of the Year
- Dr Brad McKay, doctor, author and science communicator
- Jared Purton (1976–2009) – immunologist
- Lee J. Slavutin – pathologist; recipient of the 1974 Monash University Sophie Davis Memorial Prize
- Terry Speed – mathematician
- Abu Bakar Suleiman – Vice-Chancellor of International Medical University; recipient of the 2007 Monash University Distinguished Alumni Award
- Norman Arthur Wakefield – botanist
- Lynne Kelly (science writer) – researcher and science educator
Social services and academia
- Phillip Aspinall – Head of the Anglican Church of Australia
- Diane Bell – anthropologist
- Gidon Bromberg – environmentalist
- Karen Burns – architectural historian
- Michael Clyne – linguist
- Anthony G. Collins – President of Clarkson University
- Tim Costello – humanitarian, CEO of World Vision Australia, listed as one of the Australian Living Treasures
- Mick Dodson – indigenous rights campaigner; Convenor of the ANU Institute for Indigenous Australia; one of the Australian Living Treasures; 2009 Australian of the Year
- Harriet Edquist – architectural historian
- Hugh Evans – 2004 Young Australian of the Year, philanthropist
- Ben Kiernan – leading researcher in the study of genocide
- Peter Leslie Lee – Vice-Chancellor of Southern Cross University
- Stuart Macintyre – historian
- Ron McCallum – Labour law scholar
- Simon Molesworth QC, Chairman of the Australian Council of National Trusts
- Justin Oakley – philosopher
- Neil Rees – foundation Dean of the University of Newcastle Law School
- James Mahmud Rice – sociologist
- Julian Savulescu – Uehiro Professor of Practical Ethics at the University of Oxford
- Brian Weatherson – philosopher
- Beth Wilson – Victorian Health Services Commissioner
- Dato' Michael Yeoh – founder, executive director and CEO of Asian Strategy & Leadership Institute (ASLI)
Sport
- Catherine Arlove – Olympic judo competitor
- John Bertrand – yachtsman, skipper of Australia II
- Mordy Bromberg – former AFL footballer, barrister, current Judge of the Federal Court of Australia
- Travis Brooks – field hockey player, Olympic Games gold medallist
- Ashley Brown (soccer) (born 1994) – footballer
- Nathan Burke – AFL footballer
- Alastair Clarkson – former AFL footballer, current Coach of the Hawthorn Football Club
- Tony Dodemaide – cricketer
- Ron Evans – AFL footballer and sports administrator
- Robby Foldvari – billiards and snooker player, world champion
- Brett Gosper – former member of the Australia national under-21 rugby union team; current CEO of the International Rugby Board
- Geoff Grover – former AFL and VFA footballer; VFA interstate representative (1966 Hobart Carnival)
- Lauren Hewitt – athlete
- Geoff Hunt – squash player, four-time world champion
- Janine Ilitch – netballer
- Paul McNamee – tennis player, sports administrator, winner of Wimbledon and Australian Open
- Anna Millward, née Wilson – cyclist, world champion and world record holder
- Brenton Rickard – swimmer, Olympic silver medallist
- Anna Segal – Olympic freestyle skier and 2-time world champion
- Paul Trimboli – soccer player
- David Zalcberg – Olympic table tennis player, Commonwealth Games medallist
Notable staff (past and present)
Creative arts
- Dorothy Auchterlonie – writer and poet
- Trevor Barnard – pianist
- Janine Burke – author, novelist, art historian
- Kevin Hart – poet and literary critic
- Adrian Martin – film critic
- Brian Nelson – French literature expert and translator
- Jennifer Strauss – poet
- Mary Tonkin – artist, winner of the Dobell Prize
Humanities and social sciences
- Waleed Aly – Muslim community leader and political commentator
- Andrew Benjamin – philosopher
- Harold Bolitho – historian
- Geoffrey Bolton – historian
- John Brumby – former Premier of Victoria
- Kate Burridge – prominent linguist and occasional ABC presenter
- John Button – former Australian Senator; Leader of the Australian Labor Party in the Senate; Australian Minister for Industry (1983–1993)
- David P. Chandler – historian
- Chin Liew Ten – philosopher
- Michael Clyne – linguist
- Ken Coghill – former Speaker of the Parliament of Victoria
- Peter Costello – longest-serving Treasurer of Australia; former Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party of Australia
- Franz-Josef Deiters – literary critic
- Nick Economou – political scientist and media commentator
- Ben Eltham – creative producer and social commentator
- Herbert Feith – Indonesian politics expert
- Allan Fels – economist and former Chairman of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission
- John Edward Fletcher – German studies expert
- James Alexander Forrest – lawyer, former University Council member
- Petro Georgiou – former Liberal Member of the Parliament of Australia
- Fred Gruen – economist
- Rob J. Hyndman – statistician, forecaster
- Frank Cameron Jackson – philosopher
- Margaret J. Kartomi - ethnomusicologist
- David Kemp – political scientist; former Australian Minister for Education and the Environment
- Helga Kuhse – philosopher and bioethicist
- Andrew Linklater – international relations expert
- Mal Logan – geographer, former Vice-Chancellor
- Tony Lupton – former politician and Secretary to the Victorian Cabinet, now professor of public policy
- Race Mathews – economist; Chief of Staff to Prime Minister Gough Whitlam; former Minister for Community Services; former Minister for Police and Emergency Services
- Yew-Kwang Ng – economist
- Graham Oppy – philosopher
- Kay Patterson – former Australian Senator and Minister for Health
- Mark Peel – historian
- Christian Reus-Smit – international relations expert
- John Rickard – economist
- Modjtaba Sadria – philosopher
- Richard Scotton – health economist, creator of Australian Medicare program
- Kamal Uddin Siddiqui – economist, diplomat
- Peter Singer – philosopher (now at Princeton University, US)
- J. J. C. Smart – philosopher
- Michael A. Smith – philosopher
- John Thwaites – former Deputy Premier of Victoria and Minister for Environment, Water and Climate Change, now Chair of the Monash Sustainability Institute
- Nick Trakakis – philosopher
- Hal Varian – economist
- David Wright-Neville – political scientist, terrorism expert
- Xiaokai Yang – economist, democracy campaigner, political prisoner
- Lara Owen - organisational studies, menstrual expert
Law
- Bob Baxt – lawyer, former Chairman of the Trade Practices Commission (now ACCC)
- Enid Campbell – jurist
- David Derham – jurist
- Raymond Finkelstein – Justice of the Federal Court of Australia
- Arie Freiberg – Chairman of the Victorian Sentencing Advisory Council
- George Hampel, QC – former Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria; leading advocacy instructor
- Felicity Hampel, SC – judge of the County Court of Victoria; human rights lawyer
- Peter Heerey – Justice of the Federal Court of Australia
- Sarah Joseph – human rights scholar
- Marcia Neave – Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria
- Stephen John Parker – jurist
- Mahadev Shankar – Malaysian Court of Appeal Judge
- Louis Waller – medical and criminal law expert
- Christopher Weeramantry – Judge and Vice-President of the International Court of Justice; human rights advocate
Medicine and life sciences
- Bill Charman – pharmaceutical scientist
- Michael Cowley – physiologist; Australian Science Minister's Life Scientist of the Year 2009
- Dorothy Jean Hailes – medical practitioner
- David de Kretser – medical researcher; current Governor of Victoria
- Basil Hetzel – medical researcher, public health advocate, listed as one of the Australian Living Treasures
- Frederic Jevons – biochemist
- Richard Larkins – medical researcher; former Monash University Vice-Chancellor
- Barrie Marmion – Foundation Professor of Microbiology (1963–68)
- A.T.S Sissons – pharmaceutical scientist
- Elsdon Storey – neurologist
- Alan O. Trounson – biologist, IVF pioneer and stem cell researcher
- Carl Wood – IVF pioneer
Physical sciences
- Robert Bartnik – mathematician
- Jim Breen – computer scientist, known for his work on Japanese dictionary projects[4]
- Damian Conway – computer scientist, Perl
- John Crossley – mathematician
- John Michael Cullen – ornithologist
- Richard Gunstone - physicist
- Kenneth H. Hunt – kinematics expert
- Vit Klemes – hydrologist
- Carlo Kopp – defence analyst / strategist, computer scientist
- Gilah Leder – mathematics education
- Raymond Martin – chemical scientist, former Vice-Chancellor
- Louis Matheson – engineer, foundation Vice-Chancellor
- Louis Moresi – geophysicist
- Graeme Pearman – climate change scientist
- Andrew Prentice – mathematician
- Zenon J Pudlowski – engineering expert
- John Stillwell – mathematician
- Chris Wallace – computer scientist
- Les William – physical instrumentation
Administration
Vice-Chancellors
- Sir Louis Matheson (1960–1976)
- William Alexander Gowdie Scott (1976–1977)
- Raymond Martin AO (1977–1987)
- Mal Logan AC (1987–1996)
- David Robinson (1997–2002)
- Peter Darvall AO (2002–2003)
- Richard Larkins AO (2003–2009)
- Ed Byrne AC (2009–2014)
- Margaret Gardner AO (2014–)
Chancellors
- Sir Robert Rutherford Blackwood (1958–1968)
- Sir Douglas Ian Menzies (1968–1974)
- Sir Richard Moulton Eggleston (1975–1983)
- Sir George Hermann Lush (1983–1992)
- David William Rogers (1992–1998)
- Jerry Ellis (1999–2007)
- Alan Finkel (2008–2016)
- Simon McKeon (2016–)
References
- "Obituary – Francine Valerie McNiff". vicbar.com.au. Victorian Bar. 7 April 2015. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
- "Drop in, don't drop out – Education". The Age. 23 February 2004. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
- https://www.acs.org.au/content/dam/acs/acs-documents/hall-of-fame/HallofFame.pdf
- http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~jwb/japanese.html
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