Dr. Goodall
defied scientific convention by giving the chimpanzees names
instead of numbers, and insisted on the validity of her
observations that the chimps had distinct personalities, minds
and emotions. She wrote of lasting chimpanzee family bonds.
Through the years her work yielded surprising insights such as
the discovery that chimpanzees engage in warfare.
Dr. Goodall
established the Gombe Stream Research Center in 1964. Under
the stewardship of Tanzanian field staff and other
researchers, it 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 and development programs. These include
community-centered conservation efforts in Africa which
provide local people with tools to build sustainable
livelihoods while promoting regional conservation goals such
as reforestation and an end to the illegal commercial bushmeat
trade. JGI's Roots & Shoots program, which supports students
from preschool through university in projects that benefit
people, animals and the environment, today hosts about 7,500
worldwide groups in more than 90 countries.
Dr. Goodall
travels an average 300 days per year, speaking about the
threats facing chimpanzees, other environmental crises, and
her reasons for hope that humankind will solve the problems it
has imposed on the earth. She continually urges her audiences
to recognize their personal responsibility and ability to
effect change through consumer action, lifestyle change and
activism.
|

United
Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan pins a U.N. Messenger
of Peace medal on Dr. Jane Goodall. The ceremony making
Dr. Goodall a Messenger of Peace took place at the UN
Headquarters in New York on April 16, 2002. © UN
Department of Public Information |
Dr. Goodall's
scores of honors include the Medal of Tanzania, the National
Geographic Society's Hubbard Medal, Japan's prestigious Kyoto
Prize, the Prince of Asturias Award for Technical and
Scientific Research 2003, the Benjamin Franklin Medal in Life
Science, and the Gandhi/King Award for Nonviolence. In April
2002 Secretary-General Annan appointed Dr. Goodall to serve as
a United Nations “Messenger of Peace.” In 2004, at a ceremony
at Buckingham Palace, Prince Charles invested Dr. Goodall a
Dame of the British Empire, the female equivalent of
knighthood.
Learn more:
The Jane Goodall
Institute
Roots & Shoots