Roger Martin is chair to the Board of Trustees, Population Matters (formerly the Optimum Population Trust)[1][2] and President of the Somerset Branch, Campaign to Protect Rural England.[2]
Roger J.A. Martin | |
---|---|
Born | 21 January 1941 |
Spouse | Ann Cornwell (d 2009) |
Children | 1 |
Education
editCareer
edit- VSO Northern Rhodesia, 1959–60;[2]
- Civil rights campaigner in Alabama, 1963;[3][4]
- Founder member of Campaign Against Racial Discrimination;[3][4]
- Commonwealth Office, 1964–66;[2]
- Second Secretary, Djakarta, 1967; Saigon,1968–70;[2]
- First Secretary, Foreign and Commonwealth Office, 1971–74;[2]
- Geneva, 1975–79;[2]
- Seconded to Department of Trade, as Head of Middle East/North Africa Branch,[2]
- Deputy High Commissioner, Harare, 1983–86, resigned[2] in fury;[3][4]
- Author 'The Price of Apartheid' (Pub EIU 1988);[5]
- Visiting Fellow University of Bath[2]
- Member of National Executive, VSO, 1988–96;[2]
- Director, Somerset Wildlife Trust, 1988-2001 Vice President from 2001,[2]
- Member, Flood Defence and Pollution Committees, Environment Agency, 1990–2012;[2]
- SW panel, Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, 1993–97;[2]
- SW Committee, Heritage Lottery Fund, 2001–06.[2]
- Founder member, South West Regional Assembly, 1998.[2]
- Exmoor National Park Authority: Member,1998-2008; Trustee, 2003–07.[2]
- SW Regional Chair, Campaign to Protect Rural England 2001–2006; national Trustee 2003–07; President Somerset Branch 2006-[2]
- President, Mendip Society, 2001-09[2]
HARDtalk
editOn 13 December 2010, he appeared on the BBC News programme "HARDtalk" to discuss his Trust's stance.[6]
... of course we have to change consumption habits, we have to address technology, we have to get used to a steady-state economy with reduced levels of consumption, radically reduced for all us rich countries, we've got to do these things, they're very hard, but we've also got to stabilise our numbers – if we don't, all these other policies are ultimately going to fail to produce a sustainable world.
Honours
editHe was made an Honorary Doctor of Science (Hon.DSc) by the University of the West of England in 2001.[3][4][7]
References
edit- ^ "Board". populationmatters.org/. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Who's who 2014 (166th/2014. ed.). London: A. & C. Black. 2014. p. 1435. ISBN 978-1408-1-8119-5.
- ^ a b c d "Battle of Ideas 2010 | speaker | Roger Martin".
- ^ a b c d "Mensa at Cambridge 2011, 'Population'" (PDF). Retrieved 7 July 2014.
- ^ Martin, Roger (1988). Southern Africa : the price of apartheid, a political risk analysis. London: Economist Intelligence Unit. ISBN 0850582369.
- ^ "Smaller families are better for the planet". 13 December 2010.
- ^ "Honorary graduate overview". uwe.ac.uk. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
External links
edit- Roger Martin on BBC's Hardtalk
- Roger Martin, Chair (Population Matters)
- Roger Martin profile at Battle of Ideas
- "Overpopulation is the biggest threat to our climate" "The Great Debate UK", Reuters 16 October 2009
- "the Optimum Population Trust", Rodaleworks