Professor Ralph Carnegie — epitome of the patient pedagogue
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Professor Emeritus A Ralph Carnegie of the University of the West Indies (UWI), who died at age 74, was laid to rest in Barbados yesterday, after a long career which epitomised the patient pedagogue.
His hirsute and dishevelled appearance conformed to the common view of the absent-minded professor, perpetually lost in a private oeuvre of intellectual reverie. But Professor Carnegie served the UWI in a variety of capacities, including five terms as dean of the Faculty of Law, six years as deputy principal and several periods as acting principal of the Cave Hill, Barbados Campus over a career spanning more than 40 years.
This distinguished scholar and revered teacher of generations of law students was born in Jamaica. He received his early education at Jamaica College and then read history at the nascent University College of the West Indies, later to become UWI. He was awarded the Rhodes Scholarship and studied law at Oxford University in the United Kingdom where he earned first-class honours in jurisprudence and distinguished himself early as an academic.
He joined UWI Cave Hill as one of the two founding professors of law when the Faculty of Law was established in 1970. In 1994, Professor Carnegie was among the first cadre of recipients of the Vice-Chancellor's Award for Excellence. In 2007, in a fitting tribute to him, the Faculty of Law's largest lecture theatre was named in his honour, thus to perpetuate the name of an irreplaceable pioneer.
The late professor was one of the pre-eminent experts on constitutional reform in the Caribbean. He made his knowledge available to the regional institutions and governments of the Caribbean Community (Caricom). During his public service, he provided advice to the Constitution Review Commissions of Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Grenada, and St Kitts/Nevis. He contributed to building the corpus of law by his numerous publications in books and refereed scholarly journals. Professor Carnegie devoted his life to the reading, writing and teaching of the law.
We pay tribute to his service to the academy and we do so publicly, not solely because of his remarkably long tenure, but because of the quality of that service and also because many in his profession toil in obscurity. Many of much lesser achievement in entertainment, politics and sports are accorded public adoration and acclaim. In contrast, a great many people of considerable merit and accomplishment in academic, the judiciary and the Church labour unheralded outside of the cloistered confinement of their professional fraternity.
We extend our condolence to his wife and sons and to the Caribbean legal profession which has lost one of its most iconic personalities.
Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/edito...#ixzz1BU8g1UzG
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Professor Emeritus A Ralph Carnegie of the University of the West Indies (UWI), who died at age 74, was laid to rest in Barbados yesterday, after a long career which epitomised the patient pedagogue.
His hirsute and dishevelled appearance conformed to the common view of the absent-minded professor, perpetually lost in a private oeuvre of intellectual reverie. But Professor Carnegie served the UWI in a variety of capacities, including five terms as dean of the Faculty of Law, six years as deputy principal and several periods as acting principal of the Cave Hill, Barbados Campus over a career spanning more than 40 years.
This distinguished scholar and revered teacher of generations of law students was born in Jamaica. He received his early education at Jamaica College and then read history at the nascent University College of the West Indies, later to become UWI. He was awarded the Rhodes Scholarship and studied law at Oxford University in the United Kingdom where he earned first-class honours in jurisprudence and distinguished himself early as an academic.
He joined UWI Cave Hill as one of the two founding professors of law when the Faculty of Law was established in 1970. In 1994, Professor Carnegie was among the first cadre of recipients of the Vice-Chancellor's Award for Excellence. In 2007, in a fitting tribute to him, the Faculty of Law's largest lecture theatre was named in his honour, thus to perpetuate the name of an irreplaceable pioneer.
The late professor was one of the pre-eminent experts on constitutional reform in the Caribbean. He made his knowledge available to the regional institutions and governments of the Caribbean Community (Caricom). During his public service, he provided advice to the Constitution Review Commissions of Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Grenada, and St Kitts/Nevis. He contributed to building the corpus of law by his numerous publications in books and refereed scholarly journals. Professor Carnegie devoted his life to the reading, writing and teaching of the law.
We pay tribute to his service to the academy and we do so publicly, not solely because of his remarkably long tenure, but because of the quality of that service and also because many in his profession toil in obscurity. Many of much lesser achievement in entertainment, politics and sports are accorded public adoration and acclaim. In contrast, a great many people of considerable merit and accomplishment in academic, the judiciary and the Church labour unheralded outside of the cloistered confinement of their professional fraternity.
We extend our condolence to his wife and sons and to the Caribbean legal profession which has lost one of its most iconic personalities.
Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/edito...#ixzz1BU8g1UzG
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