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Media
For Immediate Release:
2003 GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CITIZEN AWARD PRESENTED TO JANE GOODALL
BOSTON, MA (April 28, 2003)- The Center for Health and the Global
Environment at Harvard Medical School, the first medical school-based
center in the United States bringing scientific rigor to the
relationship between human health and the health of the global
environment, awards its 2003 Global Environmental Citizen Award
to Jane Goodall, PhD, CBE.
"Jane Goodall's groundbreaking and captivating research with
chimpanzees continues to change the way we perceive our animal
cousins and ourselves," says Eric Chivian, MD, HMS assistant
professor, Director of the Center for Health and the Global Environment,
and a former co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize. "Through
the Jane Goodall Institute, Dr. Goodall continues her research,
and also pursues several profoundly important environmental initiatives,
including the Congo Basin Project, which works to end the bushmeat
trade that threatens to annihilate chimpanzees; Roots & Shoots,
which encourages and supports students from preschool through university
in projects that benefit people, animals, and the environment;
and TACARE, a sustainable development and conservation program
that involves 33 villages around Lake Tanganyika, Tanzania.
"The recent outbreak of Ebola in the Congo that has killed
hundreds of primates and has caused over 100 human deaths demonstrates
the important connection between the health of the environment
and our own health," says Chivian. "We are not only endangering
the lives of our closest animal relatives through practices of
hunting and deforestation, we are threatening human life as well. "The
handling of bushmeat is thought to have been responsible for the
original spread of HIV from chimpanzees to humans and was the subject
of a congressional briefing hosted by the Center and featuring
Jane Goodall, held last February.
"Jane Goodall first brought the wonderful and fascinating
world of wild primates to us in her early career, and now she brings
us the urgent and desperate conservation needs of these threatened
animals," Gregory Stone, PhD, Vice President , Global Marine
Programs, New England Aquarium. "She has a caring stewardship
voice that speaks to everyone, and it must be listened to now more
than ever."
Jane Goodall began her landmark study of chimpanzees in Tanzania
in June 1960. One of Dr. Goodall's most significant discoveries
came in her first year in Gombe National Park, when she saw chimps
stripping leaves from stems, which they then used to fish for termites
from mounds. This and subsequent observations of Gombe chimps making
and using tools would force scientists to rethink their belief
that man was the only animal that made tools.
Dr. Goodall established the Gombe Stream Research Center in 1964,
which continues Dr. Goodall's work today, making it one of the
longest uninterrupted wildlife studies in existence. In 1977, Goodall
established the Jane Goodall Institute (JGI), which supports the
Gombe work and other research, education and conservation programs.
In 1986, with news about the rapid decrease of chimpanzee populations
across Africa, Dr. Goodall began working to save chimpanzees. She
continues this work today, traveling an average 300 days per year
to speak about the threats facing chimpanzees, other environmental
crises, and her reasons for hope that humankind will ultimately
solve the problems it has imposed on the earth. Since September
11, Dr. Goodall has emphasized the need for people to show compassion
and tolerance.
"Every individual has a role to play in protecting our environment," says
Dr. Goodall. "It is an honor to receive this award from the
Center for Health and the Global Environment, and on behalf of
the many individuals who work with me, I want to thank the Center
for its vitally important work."
Her list of publications is extensive, including two overviews
of her work at Gombe -- In the Shadow of Man and Through a Window
-- as well as two autobiographies in letters, the spiritual autobiography
Reason for Hope and many children's books. The Chimpanzees of Gombe:
Patterns of Behavior, is recognized as the definitive work on chimpanzee
behaviors and is the culmination of Jane Goodall's scientific career.
Dr. Goodall has been the subject of numerous television documentaries
and is featured in the large-screen format film, Jane Goodall's
Wild Chimpanzees (2002), which will be shown prior to the award
ceremony.
In April 2002 Secretary-General Annan named Dr. Goodall a United
Nations "Messenger of Peace." Messengers help mobilize
the public to get involved in work that makes the world a better
place, serving as advocates in a variety of areas: poverty eradication,
human rights, peace and conflict resolution, HIV/AIDS, disarmament,
community development and environmentalism.
The HMS Center for Health and the Global Environment and the New
England Aquarium, where the award is to be presented, have joined
in a number of programs to educate the public about the human health
dimension of environmental change, including developing an exhibit
on the human health importance of marine ecosystems.
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