Er is een fout opgetreden

John Mumford

4 maart 1953 - 29 december 2022

We have lost a valued colleague and wise advisor, John Mumford, Professor of Natural Resource Management in the Centre for Environmental Policy. John first joined Imperial College as a PhD student in 1975. Much of his subsequent career was based within the different iterations of the College’s environmental programme. He served as Head of Department from 2006 to 2011. Drawing on this and his undergraduate studies at Purdue University, John produced field operational, economic and ecological frameworks for quarantine and eradication management which have been implemented by governments and private sector on six continents. He has made a fundamental contribution to developing the risk analysis components for area-wide and genetic controls of disease vectors and agricultural pests, transforming the lives of hundreds of thousands in terms of income or health. John’s passion for teaching and for supporting those he taught at all levels of their future career was unparalleled. Many of his students have gone on to assume highly influential roles in governments and international bodies throughout the world. Through his advice, research and teaching, John’s quietly modest but impactful work leaves a substantial legacy. Through him and the team he has shaped and led, policy has been supported by science and many natural resources are genuinely better managed. To collate all of your kind thoughts and memories, there is an online ‘Book of Remembrance’. The photograph is one that John’s widow and close colleague, Megan Quinlan, has provided. Please add messages to this book so that John’s family can share in your memories. In lieu of flowers, the family encourages donations be made to the following charities. If you would like to donate, please use the links below. Farm Africa promotes sustainable agricultural practices, strengthens markets and protects the environment in rural Africa. https://www.justgiving.com/fundraising/johnmumfordmemorialfarmafrica The Windsor Boys’ School Boat Club is a rare state school which offers all the boys at the school the opportunity to row. John served as a trustee of the club until his death. https://www.justgiving.com/crowdfunding/mark-wilson-690?utm_term=VAAK9we4Z In the USA, John supported The Open Door, Gloucester (Massachusetts) where the mission is to alleviate the impact of hunger in this community. Please note in the message that your donation is in honour of John: https://theopendoor.networkforgood.com/

Meer... Minder...

  • Herinneringen Herinneringen
    Een ogenblikje, je bericht wordt opgeslagen...
  • Afbeelding Afbeelding
    Sleep een afbeelding om hier te plaatsen of
    Een ogenblikje, je bericht wordt opgeslagen...
  • Video Video
    Plaats een video op YouTube en plak de code hier:
    Een ogenblikje, je bericht wordt opgeslagen...
  • Condoleances Condoleances
  • Condoleances Condoleances
    Een ogenblikje, je bericht wordt opgeslagen...

Roman Carrasco 2023-01-23 11:17:35 schreef:

John was a servant leader. A truly encouraging and humble professor. The first day I met him, as his new PhD student, he brought me to the refectory at Silwood for tea. He showed me his new spatial tool to calculate costs for eradication campaigns. Then he candidly asked me for my opinion. I felt inadequate and did not have anything particularly useful to say, yet he listened attentively and made me feel as my opinion really mattered. That he would put himself at my level, from day one, blew my mind. From then onwards, he kept nurturing my confidence, allowing me to fall and stand up, again and again, with endless patience. It was not the patience of a supervisor but the patience of a father, an academic father. John was an extraordinary interdisciplinary scientist that was way ahead of his time. He would navigate nebulous disciplinary divides effortlessly. I would say that the more difficult things would get, the more unchartered the territory was, the more fun he was having. I could see a glint in his eyes when he was combining entomology and economics, geography and public health, jumping from farmers, to fisheries, to mosquitoes and back to agricultural pests. I was so profoundly influenced by him that I am spending the rest of my career trying to reproduce, rather clumsily, his magical tinkering between disciplines, yet never fully managing to master it. John did impactful science that really mattered to people and the environment. He never chased impact factors, flashy journals, buzzwords, or dedicated any effort to self-promotion. He could give his best to a small cocoa pest in Malaysia, fruit fly outbreaks in the USA or the regulation of modified mosquitoes. All the problems were the same to him, regardless of their size or profile. The only thing that really mattered was that people’s food, livelihoods or lives were at stake, and something had to be done about it. A great measure of his vast impact are all the countless international and national agencies and decision-makers that would constantly knock on his door to seek his advice. His legacy will live through the myriad policies and regulations that he helped to inform. John, this caught me off guard, it was too sudden. I was taking from granted catching up with you again soon. Having a beer together, asking you for career advice, are my best memories in academia. Now that all is gone, I feel lost. The most painful is that I never got to thank you, from the bottom of my heart, for all that you taught me. John, you will always be my inspiration to try to be a better supervisor, teacher and scientist. Thank you for having been such a fundamental part of my journey. Good bye, my academic father, you will be sorely missed. Roman.

Roman Carrasco 2023-01-23 11:17:35 schreef: John was a servant leader. A truly encouraging and humble professor. The first day I met him, as his new PhD student, he brought me to the refectory at Silwood for tea. He showed me his new spatial tool to calculate costs for eradication campaigns. Then he candidly asked me for my opinion. I felt inadequate and did not have anything particularly useful to say, yet he listened attentively and made me feel as my opinion really mattered. That he would put himself at my level, from day one, blew my mind. From then onwards, he kept nurturing my confidence, allowing me to fall and stand up, again and again, with endless patience. It was not the patience of a supervisor but the patience of a father, an academic father. John was an extraordinary interdisciplinary scientist that was way ahead of his time. He would navigate nebulous disciplinary divides effortlessly. I would say that the more difficult things would get, the more unchartered the territory was, the more fun he was having. I could see a glint in his eyes when he was combining entomology and economics, geography and public health, jumping from farmers, to fisheries, to mosquitoes and back to agricultural pests. I was so profoundly influenced by him that I am spending the rest of my career trying to reproduce, rather clumsily, his magical tinkering between disciplines, yet never fully managing to master it. John did impactful science that really mattered to people and the environment. He never chased impact factors, flashy journals, buzzwords, or dedicated any effort to self-promotion. He could give his best to a small cocoa pest in Malaysia, fruit fly outbreaks in the USA or the regulation of modified mosquitoes. All the problems were the same to him, regardless of their size or profile. The only thing that really mattered was that people’s food, livelihoods or lives were at stake, and something had to be done about it. A great measure of his vast impact are all the countless international and national agencies and decision-makers that would constantly knock on his door to seek his advice. His legacy will live through the myriad policies and regulations that he helped to inform. John, this caught me off guard, it was too sudden. I was taking from granted catching up with you again soon. Having a beer together, asking you for career advice, are my best memories in academia. Now that all is gone, I feel lost. The most painful is that I never got to thank you, from the bottom of my heart, for all that you taught me. John, you will always be my inspiration to try to be a better supervisor, teacher and scientist. Thank you for having been such a fundamental part of my journey. Good bye, my academic father, you will be sorely missed. Roman.

Reacties (0)

  • Geen reacties.