Dame Alison Fettes Richard, (born 1 March 1948) is an English anthropologist, conservationist and university administrator. She was the 344th Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge, the third Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge since the post became full-time, and the second woman. Before arriving at Cambridge, she served as the provost of Yale University from 1994 to 2002.
Richard is best known for her studies of the sifaka ( Propithecus verreauxi), a lemur of southern and western Madagascar. With collaborators and students, she led a program of field observations and the systematic collection of demographic and anatomical data on more than 1000 individually known sifaka from 1984 to the present.J Ratsirarson, J Ranaivonasy, RR Lawler, I Fiorentino, N Rios, AF Richard (2025): Propithecus verreauxi demography spanning 40 years at BezĂ Mahafaly Special Reserve, southwest Madagascar
In 2022 she published The Sloth Lemur's Song.
For more than three decades, she has worked with colleagues to help conserve the reserve's unique natural heritage, sponsor training and research by students from Madagascar and elsewhere, and to enhance socio-economic opportunities for people living in and around the forest. Over the years, these conservation efforts have been funded by the Liz Claiborne Art Ortenberg Foundation, WWF, the Schwartz Foundation, and USAID.
She has received honorary doctorates from universities in the UK (Edinburgh, Queens University Belfast, Anglia Ruskin, Exeter, Cambridge), China (Peking, Chinese University of Hong Kong), Madagascar (University of Antananarivo), Canada (York), Korea (Ewha Women's University) and the US (Yale), and in 2011 she was made a Fellow of King's College, London.
She was awarded the Green Globe Award of the Rainforest Alliance (1998), and the Verrill Medal, Yale University (2008). She was made Deputy Lieutenant of the County of Cambridgeshire in 2004. She is an Honorary Fellow of Lucy Cavendish, Newnham and Wolfson Colleges, University of Cambridge.
/ref> This is the longest-running study on wild lemurs and one of the longest running studies of any wild primate. The research has yielded valuable insights into sifaka life-histories, demography, social behavior, and genetics.
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University administration
Conservation
Advisory boards
Honours
Clubs
Footnotes
See also
External links
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