Peter H. Raven, Director of the Missouri
Botanical Garden and one of the world’s leading botanists
and advocates of conservation and biodiversity, received from
the President of the United States in December the National Medal
of Science, the highest award for scientific accomplishment in
this country.
In February 2001, Dr. Raven became President of the American Association for
the Advancement of Science, the largest organization of professional scientists
in the world. For three decades, Dr. Raven has headed the Missouri Botanical
Garden, an institution he nurtured to a world-class center for botanical research,
education and horticulture display. Under Dr. Raven’s leadership, the
Missouri Botanical Garden has become a leader in botanical research in Latin
America, Africa, and Asia, with strong programs in North America as well.
The Garden’s education program in the St. Louis region reaches more than
100,000 students each year and provides professional development for teachers.
The splendid horticultural displays attract more than 750,000 visitors to the
Garden annually, including tourists to St. Louis from around the United States
and the world.
He is also the Engleman Professor of Botany at Washington University in St.
Louis.
Described by Time magazine as a “Hero
for the Planet,” Dr. Raven champions research around the
world to preserve endangered plants and is a leading advocate
for conservation and a sustainable environment. In recognition
of his work in science and conservation, Dr. Raven is the recipient
of numerous other prizes and awards, including most recently
the Society for Conservation Biology Distinguished Service Award
and the Peter H. Raven Award for Scientific Outreach, which was
created to honor him.
He also received the prestigious International
Prize for Biology from the government of Japan; Environmental
Prize of the Institute de la Vie; Volvo Environment Prize; the
Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement, and the Sasakawa Environment
Prize. He has held Guggenheim and John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur
Foundation Fellowships. Dr. Raven is the Chairman of the National
Geographic Society’s Committee for Research and Exploration.
He was a member of the President’s Committee of Advisors
on Science and Technology. He served for 12 years as Home Secretary
of the National Academy of Sciences, is a member of the academies
of science in Argentina, China, India, Italy, Russia, and several
other countries; belongs to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences,
and was inducted into the American Academy of Achievement. He
was first Chair of the U. S. Civilian Research and Development
Foundation, a government-established organization that funds
joint research with the independent countries of the former Soviet
Union.
In August 1999, Dr. Raven brought to St. Louis the XVI International Botanical
Congress, a global gathering of more than 5,000 botanists. Dr. Raven presided
at the meeting and received the Engler Medal, in gold, for distinguished lifetime
service to plant taxonomy. The meeting, held once every six years, last occurred
in North America in 1969. Dr. Raven is Co-editor of the Flora of China, a joint
Chinese-American international project that is leading to a contemporary account
on all the plants of China.
He has written numerous books and publications, both popular and scientific,
including Biology of Plants (co-authored with Ray Evert and Susan Eichhorn,
Worth Publishers, Inc., New York), the internationally best-selling textbook
in botany, now in its sixth edition, and Environment (Saunders College Publishing,
Pennsylvania), a leading textbook on the environment. Dr. Raven received his
Ph.D. from the University of California, Los Angeles, in 1960 after completing
his undergraduate work at the University of California, Berkeley. He has received
honorary degrees from universities in this country and throughout the world.
June 2001 (N) |