18 August 2017 Hobart
WELCOME FROM THE CHANCELLOR As Chancellor of the University of Tasmania, I offer my warmest congratulations to you as you become our newest graduates. I am honoured to be able to share this special event with you, and your family and friends. Today marks a milestone event in your life as you take a significant step towards your future. In your time as a University of Tasmania student, you have focused your talents and energy on the goal of succeeding in your studies with the help and support of the University’s community. You have learnt to be knowledgeable within your discipline and to use your knowledge to change the world for the better. I encourage you to be proud of your achievements and to actively and positively contribute to your community. You graduate today from one of Australia’s leading universities – the fourth oldest university in the country. Since 1890 we have combined teaching and research in a powerful way, serving our State, our nation and the world. As we reflect on our many achievements in research, teaching and learning excellence we also look forward to the bright future that each of you as graduates will help to shape. We are indeed proud of our graduates and you can be assured that today you join a body of graduates that have, and will continue to have, an impact on the advancement of society. Graduation is not a final farewell to the University. We now count more than 100,000 alumni around Australia and the world of which some 12,500 live overseas. We look forward to welcoming you back as members of our global Alumni community, by continuing formal studies and by participating in the many symposia, lectures, concerts and events hosted here at the University and across the globe each year. For today, enjoy your achievement. Celebrate with your mentors, colleagues, family and friends. The University community is extremely proud of your success and we look forward to your continued involvement and support in the future. The Hon. Dr Michael Field AC Chancellor
Mission Statement The University of Tasmania continues a long tradition of excellence and commitment to free inquiry in the creation, preservation, communication and application of knowledge, and to scholarship that is global in scope, distinctive in its specialisations and that reflects our Tasmanian character. The University will provide leadership within its community, thereby contributing to the cultural, economic and social development of Tasmania.
A MESSAGE FROM THE VICE–CHANCELLOR Graduation is an important rite of passage for all students; a formal recognition of achievement and a celebration of the commitment you made to further your education. You can justly feel proud of your accomplishments. The University of Tasmania’s motto is Ingeniis Patuit Campus – the field is open to talent. Your studies have helped identify, shape and hone your talents. With your graduation today you become alumni of the University and join our fine family of graduates and diplomates. As alumni you, like those who have come before you, will take your learning and talent into the community and apply them to the benefit of humankind, contributing to society, adding to the intellectual, social, economic and cultural fabric of communities in Australia and around the world. Many of our alumni have reached heights of great eminence. It is now your turn to use the skills and knowledge you have acquired to explore new opportunities and to make your mark in the world. The motto ‘open to talent’ remains a fitting description of our intent. We are here because we believe in the University, and we believe in what the University is yet to achieve in Tasmania, in Australia and across the world. It is our reputation for excellence that ensures you, our graduates, have the kind of opportunities that you seek in the board rooms, laboratories and newsrooms of Tasmania, Sydney, Shanghai, New York and London. I invite you to continue your relationship with your University. Our Alumni association is an invaluable resource for you as you embark on your career, with connections across all disciplines and with chapters in Australia and many other countries. I urge you to take advantage of, and contribute to, the extraordinary community of graduates who choose to retain close association with their alma mater and demonstrate pride in their university. Congratulations on reaching this exciting milestone, and my very best wishes to you for your future. Professor Peter Rathjen Vice-Chancellor
A HISTORY OF GRADUATIONS The graduation ceremony is one of great antiquity. Its essential features have been the same since the 12th century when the first universities came into existence. Its necessary constituents are the Chancellor or his or her deputy, the academic staff, the graduands, and the public. When the Chancellor confers degrees, saying to the graduands: ‘By virtue of my authority as Chancellor, I admit you to the degree of …’ those words are a translation of the Latin form used in the Middle Ages. Then, the Chancellor’s authority to confer degrees came from the church. The church had a monopoly on education, partly because it was the guardian of true doctrine, and partly because clerics were almost the only people who could read and write. As a result, the only person who could license a teacher was the bishop of a diocese until, under pressure of other business, he deputised the task to his chief secretary or chancellor. As learning spread, teachers wanted a licence to teach not just in one diocese, but everywhere, and the only person who could give them that was the Pope. The Chancellor’s authority, then, came from the Pope. But at the Reformation, Henry VIII assumed for the Crown all the rights that had previously been the Pope’s in England. That is why all subsequent universities in England have been created by Royal Charter. It is for this reason also that the Chancellor does not wear ecclesiastical robes, as would have been worn in the Middle Ages, but robes similar to those of the Lord Chancellor of England. The second group participating in the ceremony is the academic staff. In the 12th century they would all have been called ‘masters’ or MAs. At that date they were paid no salaries, but hired their own lecture rooms and charged their own fees. But they also formed themselves into a guild or union, which is what universitas originally meant. As in all guilds they were insistent that they, and only they, should determine who should be of their number, and since this involved saying who should be teachers, they soon found themselves in conflict with the Chancellor. In the 13th century they won a great victory when they persuaded the Pope to decree that Chancellors were obliged to confer degrees on all those nominated by the masters. That is why the masters examine the candidates, why the Dean, acting as their spokesperson, reads out the names of those who are to receive degrees, and why the masters at this ceremony watch to see that the Chancellor or his deputy does what is required of him. Thirdly, the graduands. The word ‘degree’ comes from the Latin gradus, which means ‘a step’. When students
are admitted to a Bachelor degree they move one step up towards the mastership. When they are admitted to a masters degree they climb another step and come up on a level with the masters, who then receive them into their guild, or universitas. In the Middle Ages they would then have stayed on the dais, so that their old master could invest them with the symbols of office. But that was only part of the business. The new master had to deliver an inaugural lecture, entertain the whole guild of masters to dinner and preside over disputations for forty days continuously. For that reason, taking one’s masters degree was called ‘inception’, or the beginning of one’s career as a master. The public is the fourth participant. It has an important function because the whole point of the proceedings is that they should be seen and heard by valid witnesses. The public hears the words of the Dean and the Chancellor and sees the new graduates dressed in their respective gowns or robes. The academic gowns are derived from the everyday dress of the medieval clergy. In the Middle Ages they were not open in front, but closed like a clergyman’s cassock. It was in about 1500 that academics had the front opened up so as to display the fine clothes which they were wearing underneath. The hood was the normal medieval headwear, but it soon acquired a coloured lining. By the 17th century, if not earlier, these colours were strictly controlled so that anyone could identify from the colour of a graduate’s hood, the university and the degree. Based on Davis, R.H.C. 1991, From Alfred the Great to Stephen, Hambledon Press, London, pp. 307–309.
UNIVERSITY MACE & BLACK ROD UNIVERSITY MACE
THE BLACK ROD
Most Australian universities have adopted a ceremonial mace that symbolises, in its material and decoration, the universities ethos. Before assuming a ceremonial function, the mace was a weapon carried into battle by medieval knights and war-like bishops. Gradually the role of the mace changed to be purely one representative of authority.
In 2014, the University of Tasmania reintroduced the use of a Black Rod as a symbol of authority at ceremonial occasions.
The University of Tasmania was inaugurated in 1890 and the original object used as the symbol of authority was a simple black rod. In 1982 the university commissioned a mace. Peter Taylor, a local sculptor, designed and co-ordinated its creation and a number of Tasmanian artisans contributed to its making. The head is made of ceramic and bronze. Twelve shaped ceramic flanges or ‘vanes’ form the lower part of the head. The vanes are alternately enamelled in the university colours of red and blue. Gilding is applied to the outer edges of each of the 12 vanes and is topped by a bronze crown. Four of the 12 ceramic vanes extend through the crown and are chamfered to form a visual focus for the paws of four bronze thylacines (Tasmanian tigers) which surround the crown. At the base of the head is a large undecorated wooden knop and the tapered wooden shaft has two knops. The lower knop is coloured blue on its upper surface and red underneath. Its outer perimeter is gilded. The foot knop of turned wood is painted blue. Source: Australiana 2012, February, vol.34, no.1, p.29
The use of a Black Rod dates back to the 14th century in Britain. An Usher of the Black Rod was appointed to serve the monarch in the British House of Lords and was originally an officer of the Most Noble Order of the Garter, a British order of knighthood. The Black Rod was used to discipline anyone who offended the Order. The Usher of the Black Rod leads the official party in and out of important ceremonial occasions, calls the ceremony to order and assists with maintaining order throughout. The University’s Black Rod is made from Hydrowood Blackheart Sassafras. Specialty timbers including Huon Pine, Sassafras and Myrtle as well as Eucalyptus and Blackwood have laid dormant on the bed of Lake Pieman on Tasmania’s rugged West Coast since the site was flooded in the 1970s. Now, these sustainably recovered timbers, the lost trees of Hydrowood, are available for use by furniture designers and woodworkers, as well as in high-end residential and commercial construction. The Centre for Sustainable Architecture with Wood, an extension of the University of Tasmania’s School of Architecture and Design, is collaborating with the State Government and Sustainable Forest Management in the Hydrowood project. The Centre’s role is to provide mainstream timber producers with confidence that the recovered logs can be economically and efficiently converted into usable products. The University black rod is designed by award-winning designer and Program Director of Furniture Design, Simon Ancher.
University of Tasmania Mace
University of Tasmania Black Rod
ORDER OF PROCEEDINGS
Friday, 18 August 2017, at 2.30 p.m.
THE PROCESSION will enter the Federation Concert Hall at the Hotel Grand Chancellor in the following order: Usher of the Black Rod Faculty Members Deans of Faculty Chair of Academic Senate Guest Speaker Deputy Vice-Chancellors Mace Bearer Deputy Chancellor THE NATIONAL ANTHEM will be sung by Ms Grace Ovens, BMus Australians all let us rejoice For we are young and free We’ve golden soil and wealth for toil, Our home is girt by sea: Our land abounds in nature’s gifts Of beauty rich and rare, In history’s page let every stage Advance Australia fair. In joyful strains then let us sing Advance Australia fair. WELCOME TO COUNTRY Aunty Brenda Hodge WELCOME BY THE DEPUTY CHANCELLOR Mr Harvey Gibson, BEc, FCA THE OCCASIONAL ADDRESS to be presented by Mrs Rosalie Martin, BAppSc Flinders, BA(Hons), Deputy Chair, Chatters Matters Tasmania MUSICAL INTERLUDE to be played by the UTAS Brass Quintet THE CONFERRING OF DEGREES THE VALEDICTORY ADDRESS to be delivered by Ms Bartolomea Quartararo, LLB(Hons) CLOSING REMARKS by the Deputy Chancellor THE RECESSION of the stage party in reverse order to that of entry, followed by the new graduates REFRESHMENTS will be served after the ceremony in the Grand Ballroom on Level 1
This program includes the names of those candidates who will receive their degrees and diplomas in person and in absentia, and is correct at 13 August 2017.
1.
COLLEGE OF ARTS, LAW AND EDUCATION
Friday, 18 August 2017, at 2.30 p.m.
PROFESSOR MARGARET OTLOWSKI, LLB, PhD, Dean, Faculty of Law, will present the graduates and diplomates.
ARTS AUSTRALIAN MUSIC EXAMINATIONS BOARD Associate in Music, Australia Eliza Kate Susannah Coombes Cello Anastasia Star Gall Singing Lana Susan Kains Singing Sheng-Yuan Lynch Piano Jennifer Bridget Spiegel Singing Monty Lewis Wain Piano Licentiate in Music, Australia Joanne Li Piano Joseph Eamonn Phillips Violin Monty Lewis Wain Double Bass DIPLOMA OF FAMILY HISTORY Georgina Felicity Adams Glenda Marie Albert Judith Anne Anderson Raelene Ann Beazley Janice Catherine Blackhurst Jan Blow Julie Bone Nancy Deloi Bosler Katherine Irene Bousfield Patricia Braden Raine Brand Fiona Broadby Jacqueline Brock Graham Henry Edward Brown David Bunce Janelle Burns 2.
Sue-Ann Olga Burton Deborah Lyn Carman Judith Ann Carter Rebekah Grace Casson Gail Leslie Chalker Elizabeth Anne Clempson Yvonne Lesley Cocklin Janelle Maree Collins Teresa Faye Collis Julie Anne Connors Elizabeth Mary Cook Jeffrey James Cook Wayne Edward Cook Janet Julie Coyle Glyn Crisp Katrina Cunningham Lesley Joy Dacey Debra Louisa Davis-Polimeni Anthony John Dell Linda June Dive Robyn Frances Dobbs Marie Elizabeth Donaldson Kerrie Jean Duffey Melissa Jane Dwyer Rosalind Mary Andrew Escott Dianne Finch Karen Pamela Forster Megan Louise Fox Kerri Lynne Frail Lynette Sylvia Francis Kenneth James Gall Terence Peter Gatward Marilyn Ann Gendek Sandra Joy Gerhardt Peter Morris Gissing Michelle Lorraine Goldsbrough Michelle Louise Goldsmith Marilyn Beryl Grogan Elizabeth Hannelly Karen Michelle Hartley Louise Marie Hebbe Vicki Hill Petra Lale Matil Hinds Susan Lynette Hinds
Patricia Hobman Sharon Leigh Hogan Joanne Melissa Horne Dianne Kay Houlahan Bronwyn Marree Howlett Anne Huxley Suzanne Emmelyn Mary Hyde Linda Catherine Hygate Cathryn Jeneve Hyvattinen Jennifer Andrea Jacobs Meree Olivia Jacomb Bronwen Margaret Jarred Rachel Maree Jhinku Kerry Lynne Jones Joanne Rubery Keevers Mary-Ellen Kelly Jennifer Irene King Rosemary Ann Kopittke Mary Ellen Landers Beverley Lang Karyn Dugan Law Janice Lynn Lawrenz Wendy Jean Le Breton Rachel May Legge Claire Rosemary Loades Anne Lee Magee Michelle Therese Marwood Margaret Anne McCarthy Margaret Patricia McLennan Vicki McLennan Robyn Kay McMullen Evelyn Anne Mitchell Annette May Morrow Catherine Jane Morton Maureen Teresa Mulholland Jean Naumann Janeen Ann O’Connell Brian William O’Farrell Vikki Lee Ough Patricia Veronica Pack Jennifer Kaye Palmer Sharon Louise Parkinson Janine Elizabeth Patience Winifred Anne Pawley Barbara Mary Phillips
Friday, 18 August 2017, at 2.30 p.m.
Elizabeth Anne Phillips Suzanne Marie Phillips Elizabeth Natalie Prescott Vicki May Purnell John Campbell Reid Leanne Debra Roberts Susan Jennifer Roberts Anthony Noel Robinson Melanie May Roylance Robyn Margaret Roylance Patricia Saltmarsh Jennifer Ann Scammell Nadine Mireille Schofield Coral Jean Shand Ellen Sheerin Vicki Catherine Skidmore Helen Violet Smith Sandra Jean Smith Cheryl Lee Snooks Vicki Jean Sparks Debra Joy Squires Kerryn Anne Stafford Lisa Jane Stebbing Karen Mary Stevens Claire Joy Stevenson Kerry June Stevenson Robyn Mary Stockfeld Dimity Jayne Stopford Amanda Michelle Taylor Karen Leigh Taylor Fiona Lynne Terrey Darlene Suzanne Thornton Wayne Desmond Thorp Robin Anne Turner Kate Walter Terry Francis Waters-Marsh Jane Margherita Watson Helen White Sandra May Williamson Susan Carolyn Worley Suzanne Margaret Wyatt DIPLOMA OF FINE ARTS AND DESIGN Lucy Mary Lachowicz
DIPLOMA OF GENERAL STUDIES Melina Reyes-Lijauco Fiona Lynne Terrey DIPLOMA OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES Heidi Maree White DIPLOMA OF LANGUAGES Seraiah Harrold Alyce Maree Hennessy Anastasia Kali Marsh Alexander Keith Pemberton Laura Kate Smolej Anastasia Kate Tierney Jeremiah Tojino James Lewis Victor DIPLOMA OF MUSIC Timothy Andrew Gibbons Olivia Albertje Mckay Lara Jayne Nairn Emma Marie Richardson Maxine Sutcliffe DIPLOMA OF UNIVERSITY STUDIES (ARTS) Shane Scott Allison Angela Crellin Emma Horton ASSOCIATE DEGREE IN ARTS Leah Adams Amelia Baker Melanie Baker Kathryn Anne Barwick Peter Bergersen Nathan James Brown Caitlin Victoria Cashion Karen Maree Clark Sheldon Cooper Reuben Cox Matthew John Creak Marc Gregory Paul Danieletto Lucy Anita Dawson Neil Matthew Evans Nichole Lee Farquett
William Culshaw Francis Shaun Richard Gleeson Jared Gowen Aron Stewart Harvey Calvin Robert Heppell Damian Howden Allison Louise Kaye Rachael Lucia Keygan Eileen Langford Lauren Phillipa Lyons David Donald Gray Marshall Sophie Rose Masters Jason Joseph Mercer Tim Mitchell Joseph Max Mizzi Adrian Samuel Mollon Cameron Oliver Jennifer Sylvia Pender Andrea Perry John William Pratt Andrea Richardson Nikayla Jane Roach Robert Shepherd Natalie Ann Siggins Darrin Troy Smart Kate Elizabeth Springer Adam Jake Starr Samuel Storer Brendan Sumpton Matthew Sutton Shelby Sian Thomas Adrian Venettacci Nathan Wheldon Aaron Brett Wigg Mark Barry Wilby Laura Jessica Windfeld-Petersen Jennifer Wood Joshua Wood Mark St. John Woodland Darren Woolley Kristy Young
3.
Friday, 18 August 2017, at 2.30 p.m.
ASSOCIATE DEGREE IN MUSIC STUDIES Sally Jane Archer Alkeiya Brown Bianca Jane Burford Callum David Findlay Samantha James-Radford Rosalia Harmony Lonergan Hannah Watson BACHELOR OF ARTS Mitchell Leon Ackerley Richard George Barr Bannon Sarah Imogen Barnett Brolin Ren Barr Juanita Jane Barrett Katherine Bellchambers Connor James Brophy Brian Donall Campbell Charlotte Elizabeth Campbell Patrizia Carolina Maria Cangelosi Holly Cardamatis Melissa Jane Carter Kiah Rose Charles Jesse Rick Clark Jessica Lauren Coad Sean Coad Imagene Oberlin Birtwistle Cole Mitchell Russell Cook Zoe Bernadette Cooney Diana Cynthia Course Isabelle Caraigh Creavin Jordan Rhys Crombie Meagan Jane Debretton-Gordon Travis Allan Deverell Samantha Rose Dixon Morgan Rose Duhig William Star Fagan Aimee Sara Ferrall William James Fuglsang Ezra Moana Gabriel Patrick Aidan Gee Melda Mary Golding Noah Groves Eamonn Hanna Sean Allan Harding Robert Liam Anderson Hilston Erin Yael Holmstrom 4.
Isabel Howard Ryan Thomas Howell Thomas Andrew Johnston Sophie Rose Kitchener Leigh Knopman Angela Koh You Li Jonathan Charles Roger Le Bourhis Tracy Clare Lynch Nicole Louise Mackenzie Elizabeth Mason Anna Elizabeth McCrae Elena Phoebe Moores Meghan Jane Munday Ben Nehrmann Zabrina Isabel Nasir Taib Tiani Catherine Nerys Laura Jan Nilssen Benjamin Peter Ogden Robert Ernest O’Keefe Matthew Gary Paynter Caitlyn Phillips Sophia Grace Elizabeth Powell Aimee Raabus Sarah Jayne Reynolds Erik Christie Rowan Josephine Teresa Sadkowski Holly Alexandra Horwood Scharkie Patrick Solomon Sherlock Zoe Olivia Stewart Mariyam Suha Ashley Swan Rosemary Thoars Tane Yakecen Thomas Jeremiah Tojino Peter Wesley Van Loggerenberg Ekaterina Venetsanakos Henricus Frederikus Maria Vreman Daniel Wagner Grace Wilson Rosie Louise Wooley
BACHELOR OF ARTS WITH HONOURS Andrew Cairns Sebahat Cicekli Luke Edward Robinson Evan Spencer Campbell BACHELOR OF ARTS WITH HONOURS First Class Honours Shaun Alexander Eastwood Kelly Maree Porter Marion Lucy Thomas BACHELOR OF ARTS WITH PROFESSIONAL HONOURS (HUMAN SERVICES PRACTICE) Katie Jayne Duggan Robyn Gay Amy Christine Goodwin Christine Ann Hiltner Kristal Kaye Lockley Elle Meagher Demelza Ann Tomkins BACHELOR OF ARTS WITH PROFESSIONAL HONOURS (PUBLIC SECTOR LEADERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT) David George Bray Andrew John O’Dwyer Marian Clare Quilty BACHELOR OF ARTS AND BACHELOR OF FINE ARTS Brianna Fae Denning Alice Rose Evans BACHELOR OF ARTS AND BACHELOR OF SCIENCE Zoe Nanuma Kean
Friday, 18 August 2017, at 2.30 p.m.
BACHELOR OF FINE ARTS Sabina Josephine Bickley Veronicka Mickaela Devlin Sam Field Christine Marjorie Kerruish Catherine Kilpatrick Irene Anna Koroluk Georgiy Margvelashvili Sky Alison Nelson Lola Page Rachael Anne Peacock Catherine Mary Rogers Sarah Wells
BACHELOR OF SOCIAL SCIENCE Lindy Maree Aplin Bobby James Ertler BACHELOR OF SOCIAL SCIENCE (POLICE STUDIES) Rosina Blair Ivy Beauchamp Claire Elizabeth Dennis Luke John Griffiths Scott Mackenzie BACHELOR OF SOCIAL WORK Claudia Little
BACHELOR OF MUSIC James Oliver Burke Samara Grace Foster-Grose Emily Kate Rieper Joel Anthony Roberts
BACHELOR OF VISUAL COMMUNICATION Hamish Campbell Ainsworth Oliver Sam Wyker
BACHELOR OF MUSIC WITH HONOURS Emma Louise Bolton Anne Boothroyd
GRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN HUMAN SERVICES PRACTICE Anthony Paul Howe Jennifer Ann Nicholson
BACHELOR OF MUSIC WITH HONOURS First Class Honours Jack Lewis Barnes Jennifer Yu
GRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN JOURNALISM, MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS
BACHELOR OF MUSICAL ARTS Maxwell Bladel-Reid Amberlei Ann Darlington Beresford Sophie Glass Irena Ursula Anne Jakob Eloise Phillips-Robertson Nicole Josephine Taylor
GRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN PUBLIC POLICY Marta Labuda GRADUATE DIPLOMA OF JOURNALISM, MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS Zhuohuan Li Cynthia Amelia Nixon Shuang Wu GRADUATE DIPLOMA OF PUBLIC POLICY Brendan Longman Tarani Melanthi Nawaratne MASTER OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICS Andrey Panevin MASTER OF JOURNALISM MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS Monong Rao Jianchen Wu MASTER OF PUBLIC POLICY
Jordan Glen Grantham
Marta Labuda Kornchawan Namchaidee
GRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN POLICE STUDIES
MASTER OF SOCIAL WORK
Michael Robert Evan Johnson
Fiona Isobel Richardson
5.
Friday, 18 August 2017, at 2.30 p.m.
LAW BACHELOR OF ARTS AND BACHELOR OF LAWS Alexander Joshua Hinds Che Ghareeb Mohamad Eamon Jacob Morgan Katerina Pavlides April Claire Vandermeer
BACHELOR OF LEGAL STUDIES Hannah Lorraine Moore BACHELOR OF SCIENCE AND BACHELOR OF LAWS WITH HONOURS IN LAW Robert James Holbrook
BACHELOR OF ARTS AND BACHELOR OF LAWS WITH HONOURS IN LAW Samuel Luke Fair BACHELOR OF BUSINESS AND BACHELOR OF LAWS Emma Kate Livingston BACHELOR OF BUSINESS AND BACHELOR OF LAWS WITH HONOURS IN LAW Ali Borazjani BACHELOR OF LAWS Vanessa Ruth Azon-Jacometti Zac Galloway Veerababu Kalaiselvan BACHELOR OF LAWS WITH HONOURS Bartolomea Quartararo
6.
GRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN PARLIAMENTARY LAW AND PRACTICE Amosa Gaseata Shona Faatuilagi Mataafa GRADUATE DIPLOMA OF LEGAL PRACTICE Isaac Anderson Isabel Mary Bird Hanna Abbie Brown Martin George Villers Butler Sung Siong Chung Imogen Joanne Cook Alexandre Zandavalli Cordova Georgia Jane Cox Nicholas David Cuthbertson Verity Meredith Freya Dawkins Sinead Carmen Maria de Sousa Dominic Michael Deayton Nicholas Anthony Edmondson Sathyadashini D/O Elankovan
Inga Caroline Eskirtas Michael Arch Flanagan Zac Galloway Andrew Robert Gill Amelia Kate Goss Matthew Gough Harinath Gupta Gabriela Amy Harvey Oliver William Francis Ireland Ella-Grace Isles Natalie Claire Jones Michael Jan Kadziolka Lillian Elizabeth Florence King Roberts Mathew Alan Kluver Erin Soo-Li Lim Emma Kate Livingston Dinesh Loganathan Ivan S/O M K Bennett Isobel Rebecca MacLeod Claire Milligan Olga Nelson Georgia Louise Newland Caitlin Louise Prior Bartolomea Quartararo Anton Jean-Pierre Roberts Luke Vincent Rutherford Reto Sabel Maggie Elizabeth Saunders Emily Rose Stewart Emily Louise Stone
GRADUATE RESEARCH
Friday, 18 August 2017, at 2.30 p.m.
PROFESSOR CLIVE BALDOCK, BSc(Hons) Suss, MSc Lond, MTEM Melb, PhD Lond, FACPSEM, FAIP, FIPESM, FinstP, Dean of Graduate Research, will present the graduates. GRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN RESEARCH Moshood Agbolade Abdussalam Stephenie Patricia Cahalan Neil Graham Holmstrom Luke John Hortle David Lachlan Huf Rosanna Jane Lord Hunt Timothy Martin Bernard Jarvis
Sherron Amy Kean Gregory Patrick Lehman Kiriaki Mussared Liam John Nehrmann Tamas Oszvald Lucy Thelma Pitt Annalise Rees
Eleanor Denise Robin Alessandro Sheedy William Simon Nicholas Andrew Thomas Megan Janne Walch Megerssa Tolessa Walo Heath Andrew Whiley
MASTER OF ARTS John Fredrick Briggs School Humanities Thesis Title Scourge of the Establishment: Albert Ogilvie and Tasmanian society 1890-1939 Supervisors Professor S Petrow, Professor OM Roe Stephenie Patricia Cahalan School Social Sciences Thesis Title The Queen’s Domain and the People’s Temper: Contest for public natural space in urban landscapes Supervisors Professor NH Frankham, Professor EA Lester Rosanna Jane Lord Hunt School Social Sciences Thesis Title Standing Out From the Crowd: A study of Frankie magazine, niche branding, and alternative femininities Supervisors Dr KL Clifford, Dr MM Phillipov MASTER OF FINE ARTS Alexander John Thomson School Tasmanian College of the Arts Thesis Title Vital Ground: A sculptural investigation of the perceptions of Rock Island Bend on the Franklin River, Tasmania Supervisors Ms L Bleach, Mr JM Vella MASTER OF LAWS Robert Douglas White School Law Thesis Title The Sentencing of Environmental Offences Involving Non-human Environmental Entities in the NSW Land and Environment Court Supervisors Dr BL Gogarty, Professor J McDonald
7.
Friday, 18 August 2017, at 2.30 p.m.
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Moshood Agbolade Abdussalam School Law Thesis Title A Basic Economic Case for Reordering the Patent Market with Gain-based Remedies Supervisors Professor D Nicol, Dr JL Nielsen, Professor EM Webster Kerryn Anne Brent School Law Thesis Title The Role of the No-harm Rule in Governing Solar Radiation Management Geoengineering Supervisors Dr PM Lawrence, Professor J McDonald, Dr JS McGee Zachary Matthew Eaves School Humanities Thesis Title “Wir sind dem Schutz unserer Heimat Österreich;” The ‘Boundaries’ of ‘Heimat’ in the FPÖ’s National Identity Discourse Supervisors Dr BG Badger, Dr IC Farin, Dr EM Meidl Linda Sylvia Erceg School Tasmanian College of the Arts Thesis Title Biomorphic Loop: Visualising patterns of growth Supervisors Ms AL MacDonald, Dr L Negrin Neil Graham Holmstrom School Tasmanian College of the Arts Thesis Title Beautiful, Dead, Dissected: The dismembered female body in artistic representation Supervisors Dr L Negrin, Dr BT Ozolins Luke John Hortle School Humanities Thesis Title Reading the Posthuman: Contemporary fiction and critical theory Supervisors Dr LM Fletcher, Dr HL Stark David Lachlan Huf School Humanities Thesis Title The Junior British Army Officer: Experience and identity, 1793-1815 Supervisors Dr GP Daly, Dr AR Page Timothy Martin Bernard Jarvis School Humanities Thesis Title Gadamer’s Concept of Experience Supervisors Dr IC Farin, Professor JE Malpas Sherron Amy Kean School Humanities Thesis Title Blood, Guts and Becoming: The evolution of the final girl Supervisors Dr YM Blackwood, Dr LA Tatman, Professor IM Whelehan
8.
Friday, 18 August 2017, at 2.30 p.m. Gregory Patrick Lehman School Tasmanian College of the Arts Thesis Title Regarding the Savages: Visual representation of Tasmanian Aborigines in the 19th Century Supervisors Dr J Gough, Professor JH Holmes, Dr MB Walch Christopher James May School Law Thesis Title The SMSF: A mechanism for self-directed member investment Supervisors Professor DR Chalmers, Professor G Dal Pont Kiriaki Mussared School Law Thesis Title Self-Represented Litigants: The impact of the Family Law Duty Lawyer Scheme in Tasmania Supervisors Dr OC Rundle, Professor G Zdenkowski Liam John Nehrmann School Humanities Thesis Title Problems of Ideology Supervisors Dr DA Coady. Dr LH Toiviainen Tamas Oszvald School Tasmanian College of the Arts Thesis Title On the Path of Untricking Hermes: Adaptation of the design philosophy and methods of permaculture in community engaged art projects Supervisors Dr MC Bywaters, Dr KP Hall, Professor JE Malpas, Professor MA Sierra Annalise Rees School Tasmanian College of the Arts Thesis Title Navigating the Unknown: Place, space and drawing Supervisors Dr MB Walch, Dr YM Watt Eleanor Denise Robin School Humanities Thesis Title Captain Charles Swanston ‘Man of the World’ and Van Diemen’s Land Merchant Statesman Supervisors Associate Professor GP Chapman, Professor S Petrow Alessandro Sheedy School Humanities Thesis Title Perverted by Language: Weird fiction and the semiotic anomalies of a genre Supervisors Dr LM Fletcher, Associate Professor EM Leane, Dr HL Stark William Simon School Humanities Thesis Title Screening the Man: Masculinities and Australian adaptations 1975-2015 Supervisors Dr KE Harman, Dr K Nash, Professor IM Whelehan
9.
Friday, 18 August 2017, at 2.30 p.m.
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (CONT) Nicholas Andrew Thomas School Social Sciences Thesis Title Working Restoratively: A study of youth justice professionals in Tasmania Supervisors Associate Professor RD Julian, Dr MH Travers Megan Janne Walch School Tasmanian College of the Arts Thesis Title The Suspension of Pictorial Equilibrium: Materialising mutability in the medium of paint Supervisors Ms M Kunda, Mr PD Zika Megerssa Tolessa Walo School Institute of Regional Development Thesis Title Rural-Urban Linkages and Local Economic Development in Nekemte and its Surroundings, Oromia, Ethiopia Supervisors Professor J Allison, Associate Professor LB Bonney, Associate Professor J Cavaye, Associate Professor R Eversole Heath Andrew Whiley School Social Sciences Thesis Title Post-disaster Royal Commissions: Lesson-learning and the implementation of recommendations Supervisors Professor AJ Kellow, Dr HL Murphy-Gregory
10.
ORDER OF PROCEEDINGS
Friday, 18 August 2017, at 5.30 p.m.
THE PROCESSION will enter the Federation Concert Hall at the Hotel Grand Chancellor in the following order: Usher of the Black Rod Faculty Members Deans of Faculty Chair of Academic Senate Guest Speaker Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Students and Education) Mace Bearer Deputy Chancellor THE NATIONAL ANTHEM will be sung by Ms Grace Ovens, BMus Australians all let us rejoice For we are young and free We’ve golden soil and wealth for toil, Our home is girt by sea: Our land abounds in nature’s gifts Of beauty rich and rare, In history’s page let every stage Advance Australia fair. In joyful strains then let us sing Advance Australia fair. WELCOME BY THE DEPUTY CHANCELLOR Mr Harvey Gibson, BEc, FCA THE OCCASIONAL ADDRESS to be presented by Ms Catherine Williamson, BCom, BBus(Hons), AICD, Group Strategy Manager, Country Road Group MUSICAL INTERLUDE to be played by the UTAS Brass Quintet THE CONFERRING OF DEGREES THE VALEDICTORY ADDRESS to be delivered by Mr John Rowland, MBA CLOSING REMARKS by the Deputy Chancellor THE RECESSION of the stage party in reverse order to that of entry, followed by the new graduates REFRESHMENTS will be served after the ceremony in the Grand Ballroom on Level 1
This program includes the names of those candidates who will receive their degrees and diplomas in person and in absentia, and is correct at 14 August 2017.
11.
TASMANIAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS
Friday, 18 August 2017, at 5.30 p.m.
PROFESSOR CHRIS EARLEY, BA Knox, MA, PhD UofI, Dean, Tasmanian School of Business and Economics, will present the graduates and diplomates.
BACHELOR OF BUSINESS Lydia Frances Andrews Mitchell Lukin Backhouse Melissa Mary Barry Trang Duyen Nguyen Bui Samuel Carson Yun Charles Chan Ka Man Jennifer Cheng Pui Yin Cheng Wing Shan Cheng Wang Hei Cheung Zhe Wei Chew Allister Charles Cook Nicholas John Devereux Nicholas Robert Di Falco Xin Ding Sam Duigan Minju Han Manoj Kumar Handique Thomas Alexander Howard Ruoyi Hu Bradley William Jay Donghao Jiang Karan Kapoor Wai Hin Lam Minseong Lee Megan Adele Leonard Siming Li Ivan Gonyi Lodiong Yee Fung Lok Joe Steven Lucas Thomas Grant Martyn Joel William Morris Joel Frederick Morrison Dilan Augustine Nanayakkara Chendi Niu Myungsu Park Sizhe Peng Holly Elizabeth Perry Ian David Potter Cindy Tsui Yee Quan Thomas Adrian Reid Brandon Tyler Rodgers Seyedeh Mahsa Shokrollahi 12.
Bharpur Singh Thakur Arjun Singh Hoi Ting So Jessica Alice Stubley Li-Fan Su YunZhou Sun Ling Teng Chenguang Wang Matthew Douglas Williams Fong Ling Wong Sing Kit Wong Suyu Xu Yuan Yuan Yang Wai Yau Yau Mei Sze Yip Jing Wen Yong Yue Zhang Yinghan Zhao BACHELOR OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION (PROFESSIONAL HONOURS) Matthew Scott Combey BACHELOR OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION (TOURISM MANAGEMENT) Angela Serena Bain Katherine Valerie Joan Halliday BACHELOR OF BUSINESS AND BACHELOR OF SCIENCE Lada Staskova BACHELOR OF ECONOMICS Dane Xavier Bailey Calen Joshua Jeffery Allan Logonyi Lodiong Harrison Lovell Zhe Xuan Lu Nathan Richard Read Joseph David Taylor
GRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Rosaria Giovanna Killion GRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN BUSINESS STUDIES Sabby Bhardwaj Nicholas Anthony Stubbs Georgia Louise Whitbread GRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN HEALTH SERVICE MANAGEMENT Ingrid Julia Lawson Kerran Dawn Pierce Helen Pitman Tina Ann Smith GRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN MARKETING Julia Henrietta Hughes Thomas Wright GRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTING Luxin Fang Rochelle Fernandes Yanbing Guo Yizhi Huang Xinyan Liu Yang Liu Yuwei Ma Mohammed Obeid Mingming Shao Jia Sun Jianfeng Tang Hao Wang Jin Wang Rui Wang Yun Wang Chengcheng Yu Xi Zhao Dongyue Zhu
Friday, 18 August 2017, at 5.30 p.m.
GRADUATE CERTIFICATE OF MANAGEMENT Charlotte Lydia Butler Michael Barry Fitzgerald Craig Leigh Nisbet Alison Thompson GRADUATE DIPLOMA OF AVIATION AND BUSINESS Matthew Bernard Rowe Morris Shokr GRADUATE DIPLOMA OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Sicheng Cheng Yirui Cheng Jiadai Li Meng Li Yunjeong Lim Mui Yan Tse Mohan Yao Kaiyuan Zhang Suiyi Zhou GRADUATE DIPLOMA OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTING Weiran Hua MASTER OF BUSINESS Anja Kate Boot MASTER OF BUSINESS (HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT) Manjot Kaur Vandana MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION David Best Alistair Chong Rachael Anne Gates Oludare Abiodun Jeremiah Adrian Joseph Pereira John Edward Adrian Rowland Chieko Sasaki
Silvana Smillie Deborah Anne Watson Brenton Marcus West Boyuan Yu
MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION (CORPORATE GOVERNANCE) Colleen Emily Bow Nicole Louise Trounce
MASTER OF FINANCE Xiaoyue Chen Juan Gao Guoqi Hao Mengyang Hu Chaolun Jia Shuang Li Tzu-Chun Liao Minh Nhut Nguyen Ying Qu Fanxuan Shen Mun Xing Tan Xuan Wang Di Wu Yunru Xie
MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION (FINANCE)
MASTER OF HEALTH INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
Ahmad Abdullah Alswilem
Nelly Onyshchuk
MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION (HEALTH MANAGEMENT) William Malcolm Ericksson Vicki Katsioulas Deborah Anne Schofield-Gavin
MASTER OF HEALTH SERVICE MANAGEMENT Fleur Jamieson Dallas Rae
MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION (AGRICULTURAL INNOVATION) Scott Roderick Atkins
MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION (HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT) Nicole Muller Sean Mitchell Vincent MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION (INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS) Li Ji MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION (PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTING) Pardeep Kaur Shuyang Shi Yanli Tan Zhengyu Xu
MASTER OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS Han Ding Yingying Gao Yiwen Gao Yue Gao Xuejing Han He Shan Yifan Hu Jinchao Liu Qiao Weifeng Su Sun Xue Yu Wei Yuan Haoting Zhang Qingyu Zhang
13.
Friday, 18 August 2017, at 5.30 p.m.
MASTER OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS (BUSINESS MANAGEMENT) Yingxiao Wu Pai Yu MASTER OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS (HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT) Ramandeep Kaur Viring MASTER OF MANAGEMENT Jie Hou MASTER OF MARKETING Karlene Maree Segovia MASTER OF MARKETING (BUSINESS MANAGEMENT) Pitchaya Satitwiboon MASTER OF MARKETING (HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT) Sarabjit Kaur MASTER OF MARKETING (INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS) Chia Yun Tsai MASTER OF MARKETING MANAGEMENT Suna Cha Supanta Sangroong MASTER OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTING Ibrahim Faleel Yifeng Hu Xianyu Huang Jialin Ji Qianwen Jiang Jun Jiao Duc Anh Le Haizhou Li Li Luo Natasha Arora 14.
Richel Ravillas Dip Ling Tsai Min-huang Wu Zhong Jiao Xu Xiruo Yin Jiaqi Zhang Pei Zhang Yuhao Zhou MASTER OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTING (BUSINESS MANAGEMENT) Sangita Adhikari Pramila Adhikari Parajuli Baljit Kaur Yaru Bi Shaolun Chang Ormruthai Chanjam Meng-Hsien Chen Zuo Cheng Lin Cui Hari Prasad Dahal Sonal Dhiman Ling Dong Yumo Dong Lei Fan Li Feng Harpreet Kaur Gill Xiaoyi Han Yu-Ying Hsu Yang Hu Jiaxiang Huang Jiaying Huang Lubna Irum Weibin Ji Yuhui Jiang Bibek Karmacharya Kangxin Lai Kumari Lama Yi Li Ming Liang Ying Lin Changchang Liu Wen Liu Ziwei Liu Barsha Lohani Tongyu Lyu Hui Min
Mei Ning Jie Pan Laxman Panthi Sangita Panthi Qian Pu Hui Qiu Dan Qu Zhifeng Qu Manju Shrestha Xinhao Su Biswash Tamang Chew Ping Tan Gyani Thing Jiao Wang Xiaohui Wang Xinyu Wang Yang Wang Wang Yuan Di Wu Yu Wu Qiutong Xia Jipeng Xie Weiwei Xu Xinyin Xu Lulu Yan Binjie Yang Xiaonan Yang Hao Yuan Jamal Mustafa Zahid Hong Zhang Mengdan Zhang Yang Zhang Yicheng Zhang Ying Zhang Jianfei Zhao Yan Zhao Siyun Zhou Xilin Zhou Zetian Zhu Xiaoxuan Zhuang MASTER OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTING (CORPORATE GOVERNANCE) Xiangyu Li
Friday, 18 August 2017, at 5.30 p.m.
MASTER OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTING (HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT) Minoo Mishra Syed Faisal Shah
MASTER OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTING (MARKETING) Yali Wang
MASTER OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTING (INFORMATION SYSTEMS) Huynh Long Bao
GRADUATE RESEARCH PROFESSOR CLIVE BALDOCK, BSc(Hons) Suss, MSc Lond, MTEM Melb, PhD Lond, FACPSEM, FAIP, FIPESM, FinstP, Dean of Graduate Research, will present the graduates.
GRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN RESEARCH Biplob Chowdhury Barry Miles May Naolah Pitia Oskaras Vorobjovas-Pinta Debbie Isabel Wills Bo Xu DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Biplob Chowdhury School Tasmanian School of Business & Economics Thesis Title Essays on Asset Pricing Supervisors Dr PA Blacklow, Professor MH Dungey, Dr N Jeyasreedharan, Dr TP Pham, Dr J Tian, Dr W Yao Fiona Siobhan Harpur
15.
Friday, 18 August 2017, at 5.30 p.m.
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (CONT) School Thesis Title Supervisors
Tasmanian School of Business & Economics Understanding the Dynamics of Health Policy Change Professor DW Adams, Associate Professor MR Dibben, Professor RG Eccleston, Associate Professor AJ Martin
Barry Miles May School Tasmanian School of Business & Economics Thesis Title Exploring Local Government Approaches to Sustainable Practice: An investigation into tourism’s development in Tasmania Supervisors Dr AM Dunn, Dr AL Hardy, Mr D Reiser Bernadette Nona Smith School Tasmanian School of Business & Economics Thesis Title Facilitating Collaborative Learning in Accounting Students: A cross-institutional study of perceptions and experiences of group work in university accounting education Supervisors Associate Professor NR Brown, Dr SH Crispin, Dr S Hrasky, Professor GM O’Donovan, Ms Y Ryan, Associate Professor TD Wilmshurst Justin Michael Thurley School Tasmanian School of Business & Economics Thesis Title IT Innovation Theory and Practice: A multi-case study investigation of organisational approaches and experiences in IT innovation Supervisors Dr KA Butler-Henderson, Professor KH Smith, Associate Professor PA Turner, Professor J West Oskaras Vorobjovas-Pinta School Tasmanian School of Business & Economics Thesis Title Gay Neo-tribes: An exploration of space and travel behaviour Supervisors Dr AM Dunn, Dr AL Hardy, Dr GK Lewis, Dr BJ Robards Debbie Isabel Wills School Tasmanian School of Business & Economics Thesis Title Organisational Legitimacy: The case of the Australian Red Cross Supervisors Professor R Clift, Dr S Hrasky, Dr SF Shimeld, Professor RJ Willett, Dr BR Williams, Associate Professor TD Wilmshurst
16.
UNIVERSITY ARMS & MEDALS UNIVERSITY ARMS Prior to 1936, the University used a Common Seal that was the seal of the Tasmanian Council of Education. In 1937, the University Council arranged a competition, seeking designs for a coat of arms from University graduates. A design by Mr Egbert Holder Harry BA, BCom, a Launceston resident, was declared the winner from 47 submissions. Mr Harry’s design was a rough sketch, with a shield divided into silver and blue quarters bearing the following charges: –– a red lion being the Tasmanian badge as decreed by Queen Victoria –– a gold book signifying ‘the academic side of University Activity’ –– a gold Southern Cross ‘representative of Australia’ –– a red Olympic torch ‘representing the athletic side of University activity’ The original design also contained a crest, which was later removed. Over time, the university commissioned UK designer for the Royal Mint, Mr George Kruger Gray, to produce a beautifully painted drawing that looks much like the regal logo in use today. He kept the emblems of Mr Harry’s design, arranging them in a visually appealing, heraldically correct manner.
The blazon of a Grant of Arms is the official definition of the Arms. The blazon for the University’s shield, from the Grant of Arms is translated (from heraldic language) as follows: A white/silver shield on which is a red lion walking across facing straight ahead with right forepaw raised with blue claws and tongue, holding in its right forepaw a flaming torch in natural colours; and on the shield is also a broad red bar making up the top one-third on which is a broad central blue vertical bar with a yellow/gold border down each side, carrying the [five] brightest stars of the Southern Cross in white/silver; between two yellow/gold books closed with clasps. The University of Tasmania’s logo, used on its stationary and web sites today, is based on a standardised and stylised version of the red Lion passant from the Coat of Arms. UNIVERSITY MEDALS The University Medal is the highest academic award made to an undergraduate student. The medals are awarded to students who have a consistent record of exceptional academic achievement at all levels of a bachelor’s degree program, and qualify for a bachelor’s degree with first class honours. Up to thirteen medals can be awarded annually.
In the 1970’s the University applied to the College of Heralds for a Grant of Arms. This application was successful, and for the first time the University had Arms.
University of Tasmania Coat of Arms
University of Tasmania Medal
ACADEMIC REGALIA The University’s academic dress is based on the styles worn at the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge. The academic regalia consists of a scarlet or black cloth gown; a separate hood or stole; and a trencher cap (also known as mortarboards) or bonnet. Gowns and hoods of different shapes indicate the degrees of Bachelor, Master and Doctors. The colour of the hoods represents the discipline of study. Honorary Doctorate A gown of scarlet cloth faced on the opening of the sleeves and on the full length of the lapels with coloured silk representing the academic discipline. The hood is black and fully lined with coloured silk. A black velvet tudor bonnet with a gold cord and tassel.
Australian Maritime College Bachelors Degree A gown of black cloth. The hood is black and fully lined with coloured silk and bound on the tippet and cowl with gold braid. A black trencher cap with a black cord and tassel.
Honorary Master Degree
Associate Degrees and Diplomas
A gown of scarlet cloth faced on the opening of the sleeves and on the full length of the lapels with coloured silk representing the academic discipline. The hood is black and fully lined with coloured silk. A trencher cap with a gold cord and tassel.
A gown of black cloth. A stole of coloured silk representing the academic discipline. A black trencher cap with a black cord and tassel.
Professional Doctorates
Chancellor and Vice-Chancellor
A gown of black cloth faced on the opening of the sleeves and on the full length of the lapels with coloured silk representing the academic discipline. The hood is black and fully lined with coloured silk. A black velvet tudor bonnet with a gold cord and tassel.
A gown of black damask silk trimmed with gold braid, and featuring gold embriodery designs representing the lion from the University’s coat of arms and the Tasmania floral emblem, the Tasmanian Flowering Blue Gum. A black trencher cap with the cap edged with gold braid, or a black velvet Tudor bonnet, with a gold cord and tassel.
Doctor of Philosophy A gown of black cloth faced on the opening of the sleeves and on the full length of the lapels with scarlet silk. The hood is scarlet and fully lined with scarlet silk. A black velvet tudor bonnet with a scarlet cord and tassel.
CEREMONIAL REGALIA
Members of UTAS Council A gown of black cloth with gold braid running from front to back on each shoulder. A black trencher cap with a black cord and tassel.
Masters Degree
Members of the Australian Maritime College Board
A gown of black cloth. The hood is black and fully lined with coloured silk. A black trencher cap with a black cord and tassel.
A gown of black cloth with a square collar of gold silk and faced on the full length of the lapels with gold silk. A black trencher cap with the cap edged with gold braid and a black cord and tassel.
Australian Maritime College Masters Degree A gown of black cloth. The hood is fully lined with coloured silk and bound the on tippet and cowl with gold braid. A black trencher cap with a black cord and tassel. Bachelors Degree A gown of black cloth. The hood is black and lined with coloured silk on the tippet and cowl. A black trencher cap with a black cord and tassel.
Fellow A gown of black cloth with a stole of red trimmed with gold. A black trencher cap with a black cord and tassel.
ACADEMIC REGALIA FACULTY, SCHOOL OR DISCIPLINE ARTS Music & Performing Arts Fine/Visual Arts and Craft All other Arts Awards COMMERCE All awards LAW All awards EDUCATION All awards HEALTH Medical Science Medicine and Surgery Nursing Pharmacy All other Health Awards SCIENCE and ENGINEERING Agricultural Science Architecture and Town Planning Environmental Design Environmental Studies Geomatics and Surveying Engineering and Technology All other Science, Engineering and Technology Awards AUSTRALIAN MARITIME COLLEGE Marine Conservation and Resource Sustainability Marine Engineering and Hydrodynamics Maritime Operations Marine and Logistics Management Certificate I-IV (all disciplines) Diploma (all disciplines)
COLOUR
WELCOME TO YOUR UNIVERSITY ALUMNI COMMUNITY Congratulations on completing your studies successfully and graduating today. As a graduate of the University of Tasmania, you are part of a vibrant global family of over 107,000 alumni that live and work in all continents around the world and across more than 120 countries. The University of Tasmania’s alumni program enables you to keep or renew contact with your former classmates, colleagues, friends and professional networks globally. So as a graduate of the University we encourage you to: Share your graduation moments Graduation is a celebration of your success at university and we encourage you to share celebration messages and photos of your smiles, gowns, families and friends on the University’s Alumni Facebook page at facebook.com/UTASAlumni. Show your University pride
Recognise the exceptional The prestigious University of Tasmania Distinguished Alumni and Foundation Graduate Awards are held annually and recognise the achievements of our graduates globally who are making a significant difference in their communities. For more information or to nominate outstanding alumni for the awards visit utas.edu.au/alumni. Make a difference The University of Tasmania Foundation provides important philanthropic leadership for projects and programs that underpin excellence at the university. As part of this role, scholarships for students who would not otherwise be able to access a University of Tasmania education are always a high priority. So if you would like to make a gift to support a scholarship or another area please phone + 61 3 6226 8575.
The University of Tasmania is ranked in the top 2% of research universities worldwide and is also a multi-award winner for teaching excellence – extraordinary achievements when you think about them. So if you are proud of your achievements and proud to be one of our alumni, then tell the world! Reap the benefits As a graduate of the University of Tasmania you have access to many exclusive services and benefits including: –– professional development events and webinars; –– career mentoring programs; –– discounts on further study; –– lifelong learning opportunities; –– career development services; –– free access to the University Library; –– lifelong email; –– alumni news services and social media;
KEEP IN TOUCH We encourage you to keep your contact details updated with our Alumni Relations Office so we can continue to keep you informed about all the exclusive opportunities available to you as a graduate of the University of Tasmania. To update your contact details online or for more information about your alumni community visit utas.edu.au/alumni.
–– volunteering opportunities; –– company discounts AND –– reunions and networking events.
utas.edu.au/alumni
MEET SOME OF YOUR ALUMNI FAMILY As a member of the University of Tasmania’s alumni community you are part of an illustrious family that continues to achieve extraordinary success globally. Meet some of your inspirational alumni family… Luke McGregor BA/BEc 2007 As a comedian and actor, Luke McGregor has forged a successful career in the Australian entertainment industry over the last decade. Luke’s impressive body of comedic work includes TV roles in Studio A, It’s a Date, The Time of Our Lives, Legally Brown and the Logie-winning Utopia. In 2016, he was cocreator and star of the hit ABC documentary series Luke Warm Sex. He has also performed at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival, winning Best Newcomer for his show My Soulmate is Out of My League in 2013. Recently he has also performed to sold out audiences at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and Tasmania’s 10 Days on the Island Festival. Brooke Saward BA 2013 A Launceston local and avid world traveller, Brooke is the founder of renowned travel and lifestyle blog World of Wanderlust, an online source of travel tips and inspiration. Established in 2013, the blog has been a massive success, attracting one million social media followers and six million readers globally to date. In 2016, Brooke released her highly acclaimed first book, World of Wanderlust: How to Live an Adventurous Life, through Penguin Random House and also unveiled a World of Wanderlust app.
Dr Saul Eslake, BEc(Hons) 1979, LLD honoris causa 2012 As one of Australia’s preeminent economists, Saul Eslake has worked in the Australian financial markets for more than 25 years, including as Chief Economist at McIntosh Securities in the late 1980s, Chief Economist (International) at National Mutual Funds Management in the early 1990s, as Chief Economist at the Australia & New Zealand Banking Group (ANZ) from 1995 to 2009, and as Chief Economist (Australia & New Zealand) for Bank of America Merrill Lynch from 2011 until June 2015. In 2015 Saul commenced his own economics consultancy business in Hobart and the following year was appointed as the University’s inaugural Vice-Chancellor’s Fellow. Dr Clare Smith BBiotech (Hons) 2007, PhD 2012 Dr Clare Smith is currently in the United States researching tuberculosis treatment with the University of Massachusetts and has become an international leader in research into the eradication of malaria, through her discovery of a new antimalarial compound. Clare has used genetic and pharmacological techniques to investigate the role of host enzymes in malarial infection. This discovery has the potential to have an immense global impact, with clinical trials on the patented research now underway. Clare was awarded the University’s Foundation Graduate Award in 2016 and was named Tasmanian Young Australian of the Year in 2014. Brodie Neill BFA (Hons) 2001 Brodie works from his London studio designing furniture destined for the major cities of the world. He has been previously named in TIME Magazine’s Top 100 Most Influential Designers and one of the best designers in the world by Taschen’s Design Now. In 2016, Brodie was given the important honour of representing Australia at the inaugural London Design Biennale. This event included works from 35 countries and was attended by over 90,000 visitors.
ALUMNI PROFILES Professor Roger Byard AO, PSM, MBBS 1978, B Med Sci 1975 Roger is one of Australia’s most distinguished contributors to the medical profession. His achievements in the field of pathology have been recognised globally. He is an Officer of the Order of Australia, a Fellow of the Royal College of Pathologists of the United Kingdom, a Fellow of the College of American Pathologists, Honorary Member of the College of Forensic and Legal Medicine of Sri Lanka and a Registered Expert with the International Criminal Court in The Hague. Roger is the George Richard Marks Chair of Pathology at the University of Adelaide and a Senior Specialist Forensic Pathologist at Forensic Science SA. He has a specific interest in Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), and has published over 500 papers in peer-reviewed journals. He was awarded the Distinguished Alumni Award in 2016 – one of the University’s highest accolades. Dr Mansoor Mirkazemi FRACS (Plas), B Med Sci 1993, MBBS 1995 Mansoor arrived in Tasmania in 1986 as a 17 year-old Iranian refugee, and has gone on to become a highly successful plastic surgeon and humanitarian. Currently working with Collins Plastic Surgery in Melbourne, he specialises in cosmetic surgery, plastic surgery and hand surgery. He is a Fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons (FRACS), a member of the Australian Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons (ASPS) and a member of the Australasian Cleft Lip and Palate Association and travels frequently to Indonesia and Fiji as an Interplast volunteer where he treats children with cleft lips and palates, burn injuries, hand injuries and tumours. He received the University’s prestigious Foundation Graduate Award in 2015. Alison Watkins, BCom 1985 Originally from Tasmania’s midlands, Alison has gone on to forge a ground-breaking career in the Australian business sector over the last three decades. Alison is currently Group Managing Director of Coca Cola Amatil and Non-Executive Director for The Centre of Independent Studies. Prior to her appointment with Coca-Cola Amatil in 2014, Alison’s roles included CEO of agribusiness GrainCorp Limited, CEO of Berri Limited and Managing Director of Regional Banking at ANZ. She also spent ten years at McKinsey & Company from 1989-1999 and became a partner of the firm in 1996 before moving to ANZ as Group General Manager Strategy. Alison remains one of only a few females to have held a CEO position with an ASX200 company and was the first appointed to head a listed Australian agribusiness. Shane Gould MBE, MEnvMgt 2010, MCA (Visual Arts) 2012 Shane won five individual Olympic swimming medals at the 1972 Munich Olympic Games and is the only swimmer ever to hold every freestyle world record simultaneously. She was the first female swimmer to win three Olympic gold medals in world-record time and was a torch-bearer for the opening ceremony of the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games. Now based on Tasmania’s east coast, Shane is a highly successful businesswoman, author, photographer and keynote speaker.