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List of University of Adelaide people

This is an incomplete list of University of Adelaide people including notable alumni and staff associated with the University of Adelaide in Australia.

Alumni

Business

Government

Heads of state

  • Frances Adamson – governor 2021–present
  • Roma Mitchell – Australia's first female judge; its first female governor 1991–1996
  • Eric Neal – business leader, governor 1996–2001
  • Mark Oliphant – physicist; governor 1971–1976
  • Keith Seaman – Uniting Church minister; governor 1977–1982
  • Hieu Van Le – lieutenant governor of South Australia 2007–2014; governor 2014–2021

Politicians

National leaders
Australia
All other countries
  • Peter Ong Boon Kwee – head of the Civil Service, Singapore since 2010, the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Finance, Singapore since 2009, and Permanent Secretary with Special Duties in the Prime Minister's Office, Singapore
  • Ong Teng Cheong – 5th president of Singapore (1993–1999)
  • Joseph Pairin Kitingan – 7th chief minister of Sabah, Malaysia (1985–1994)
  • Adenan Satem – 5th chief minister of Sarawak, Malaysia (2014–2017)
  • Abdul Taib – 4th chief minister of Sarawak, Malaysia (1981–2014); governor of Sarawak (2014–)
  • Tony Tan Keng Yam – 7th president of Singapore (2011–2017); deputy prime minister of Singapore (1995–2005)
South Australian premiers
  • Lynn Arnold – premier of South Australia 1992–1993
  • John Bannon – premier of South Australia 1982–1992
  • Henry Barwell – premier of South Australia 1920–1924
  • Dean Brown – premier of South Australia 1993–1996
  • Don Dunstan – premier of South Australia 1967–1968, and 1970–1979
  • Rob Kerin – premier of South Australia 2001–2002
  • Peter Malinauskas – premier of South Australia 2022–
  • David Tonkin – premier of South Australia 1979–1982
  • Jay Weatherill – premier of South Australia 2011–2018
Other Federal politicians
  • Benjamin Benny – senator for South Australia (1920–1926)
  • Gordon Bilney – member for Kingston (1983–1996), former minister
  • Simon Birmingham – senator for South Australia (2007–), former minister
  • Julie Bishop – member for Curtin (1998–), former minister
  • Mark Bishop – senator for Western Australia (1996–2014)
  • Nick Bolkus – senator for South Australia (1981–2005), former minister
  • Mark Butler – member for Hindmarsh (2007–), current minister
  • Peter Duncan – member for Makin (1984–1996), former minister
  • Don Farrell – senator for South Australia (2008–2014, 2016–), current minister
  • Janine Haines – senator for South Australia (1977–1978, 1981–1990)
  • Sarah Hanson-Young – senator for South Australia (2008–)
  • Robert Hill – senator for South Australia (1981–2006), former minister, and Permanent Representative of Australia to the United Nations
  • Annette Hurley – senator for South Australia (2005–2011)
  • Linda Kirk – senator for South Australia (2002–2008)
  • Keith Laught – senator for South Australia (1951–1969)
  • Alexander McLachlan – senator for South Australia (1926–1944), postmaster-general
  • Andrew Nikolic – member for Bass (2013–2016)
  • Christopher Pyne – member for Sturt (1993–2019), former minister
  • Margaret Reid – senator for the Australian Capital Territory (1981–2003)
  • Andrew Southcott – member for Boothby (1996–2016)
  • Natasha Stott Despoja – senator for South Australia (1995–2008), Leader of the Australian Democrats (2001–2002)
  • Amanda Vanstone – senator for South Australia (1984–2007), former minister, ambassador to Italy (2007–2010)
  • David Vigor – senator for South Australia (1984–1987)
  • Keith Wilson – senator for South Australia (1938–1944), member for Sturt (1949–1954, 1955–1966)
  • Penny Wong – senator for South Australia (2002–), current minister
  • Nick Xenophon – senator for South Australia (2008–2018)
Other state and territory politicians
  • Adair Blain – member for the Northern Territory (1934–1949)
  • Lia Finocchiaro – chief minister of the Northern Territory (2024–present)
  • Pru Goward – member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly, current minister
  • Shane Stone – chief minister of the Northern Territory (1995–1999)
  • Ian Wilson – member for Sturt (1966–1969, 1972–1993), former minister
Other politician figures
  • David Combe – former Secretary of the Australian Labor Party
  • Lynton Crosby – campaign strategist and co-founder of the Crosby Textor Group
  • Lim Soo Hoon – first female Permanent Secretary of Singapore
  • Raymond Lim – member of Parliament of Singapore (2001–2015), Minister for Transport
  • G. Parameshwara – deputy chief minister of Karnataka
  • Lockwood Smith – member of the New Zealand Parliament (1984–2013), speaker of the New Zealand House of Representatives, high commissioner of New Zealand to the United Kingdom

Public servants

  • Finlay Crisp – public servant, academic and political scientist
  • John Menadue – Secretary of the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet
  • Martin Parkinson – Secretary of the Department of the Treasury
  • John E. Scanlon – Secretary General of CITES
Diplomats
Military

Humanities

Arts

History

Journalism and media

Literature, writing and poetry

Philosophy and theology

Judiciary and the law

  • Amanda Banton – lawyer
  • John Basten – justice of the New South Wales Court of Appeal
  • Richard Blackburn – former chief justice of the Australian Capital Territory
  • Catherine Branson – former president of the Australian Human Rights Commission and justice of the Federal Court of Australia
  • John Bray – chief justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia, poet and classicist
  • James Crawford – legal academic; judge of the International Court of Justice (2014)
  • Bill Denny – Attorney-General of South Australia
  • John Doyle – chief justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia
  • John Finnis – legal scholar and philosopher
  • Regina Graycar – emeritus professor of Law School, University of Sydney
  • Hermann Homburg – attorney-general of South Australia
  • Elliott Johnston – Communist activist and justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia
  • Len King – South Australian attorney-general; chief justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia
  • Robert Lawson – Attorney-General of South Australia
  • Chris Kourakis – chief justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia
  • Bruce Lander – South Australia's first Independent Commissioner Against Corruption
  • G. C. Ligertwood – judge of the Supreme Court of South Australia
  • Brian Martin – chief justice of the Supreme Court of the Northern Territory
  • Robin Millhouse – lawyer, politician, justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia; chief justice of Kiribati and Nauru
  • Roma Mitchell – lawyer, first female Queen's Counsel in Australia (1962); justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia; first female superior court judge in the British Commonwealth (1965)
  • George Murray – chief justice of South Australia
  • Mellis Napier – chief justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia
  • Rosemary Owens – dean of Law at the University of Adelaide Law School
  • Angas Parsons – former judge of the Supreme Court of South Australia and former attorney-general of South Australia
  • Geoffrey Reed – judge in the Supreme Court of South Australia; the first director-general of ASIO
  • Len Roberts-Smith – former justice of the Supreme Court of Western Australia
  • Paul Rofe – former South Australian director of Public Prosecutions
  • Colin Rowe – attorney-general of South Australia
  • Reginald Rudall – attorney-general of South Australia
  • Chris Sumner – attorney-general of South Australia
  • Margaret White – first female judge of the Supreme Court of Queensland

Medicine and science

Nobel laureates

  • William Lawrence Bragg – physicist, Nobel laureate with his father (William Henry Bragg) "for their services in the analysis of crystal structure by means of X-rays"
  • Howard Florey – pharmacologist, Nobel laureate (Physiology or Medicine, 1945) "for the discovery of penicillin and its curative effect in various infectious diseases"
  • Robin Warren – pathologist, Nobel laureate (Physiology or Medicine, 2005), for the "discovery of the bacterium Helicobacter pylori and its role in gastritis and peptic ulcer disease"

Medicine

Science and mathematics

Sports

Administration

Chancellors

Vice-chancellors

Faculty

Nobel laureates

Law

Science

Natural sciences

Mathematicians

  • Keith Briggs – mathematician, formerly on the staff of the Physics Department
  • Gavin Brown – mathematician, former vice chancellor of Adelaide and Sydney Universities
  • Charles E. M. Pearce – applied mathematician
  • Renfrey Potts – Adelaide's first professor of applied mathematics
  • George Szekeres – mathematician known for the Erdős–Szekeres theorem
  • Ernie Tuck – applied mathematician
  • Mathai Varghese – pure mathematician, Elder Professor of Mathematics, Australian Laureate Fellow (2018)

Physicists

  • Derek Abbott – physicist and engineer; pioneered the first terahertz radiation (T-ray) program in Australia; led the early development of a branch of game theory known as Parrondo's paradox; cracked the Somerton Man case
  • Rod Crewther – physicist; former PhD student of the Nobel prize winner Murray Gell-Mann
  • Sir Kerr Grant – Elder professor of physics 1911–1948
  • Bert Green – former PhD student of the Nobel Laureate Max Born; the "G" in "BBGKY"
  • Kenneth G. McCracken – physicist and former director of CSIRO
  • Tanya Monro – physicist and Federation Fellow (2008)
  • Albert Percival Rowe – vice-chancellor, physicist; previously radar pioneer in Britain
  • Anthony William Thomas – Elder professor of physics; South Australian Scientist of the Year 2014

Medicine

Humanities

Other

  • Barry Brook – climate scientist and advocate of nuclear power
  • Adrian Cheok – electrical engineer, roboticist
  • Alan Cooper – ancient DNA expert and Federation Fellow (2004)
  • Paul Davies – professor of Natural Philosophy, Templeton Prize winner (1995)
  • Guy Debelle – economist and former deputy governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia
  • Tim Flannery – palaeontologist, Australian of the Year
  • Fay Gale – geographer; vice-chancellor of University of Western Australia (1990–1997)
  • Elizabeth Grant – architect and anthropologist
  • Geoff Harcourt – economist
  • Peng Shi – engineer
  • Peter Sutton – anthropologist
  • Riccardo Tossani – Italo-Australian architect

References