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Triennial Award |
Personalities
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Dr. Lucille Mathurin Mair
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Dr.
Lucille Mathurin Mair is undoubtedly a Caribbean
citizen of great intellectual stature and high
international repute and of whom all the Caribbean
is proud. For her outstanding service as a diplomat,
scholar and women’s rights activist she
was accorded the highly deserved honour of fifth
recipient of the CARICOM Triennial Award in 1996.
In response to her career urgings, Dr. Mair left
her country of birth, Jamaica, to pursue a degree
in History at the London University from which
she graduated with Honours. On return to the Caribbean
she obtained a Ph. D in History at the University
of he West Indies. Dr. Mair has had a long and
rewarding association with the UWI serving as
Lecturer, first Warden of the Women’s Hall
of Residence and in her post retirement years
as the first head of its Women and Development
Programme. She was instrumental in the establishment
and success of this programme. |
Dr. Mair has been hailed as a highly
esteemed international diplomatic figure serving prestigiously
as Assistant Secretary-General in the office of the
United Nations Secretary in 1979, from which she performed
with distinction the role of Secretary-General of the
World Conference on the United Nations Decade for Women
in 1980. The admirable record of international service
of her career includes appointment as the Secretary-General’s
Advisor to UNICEF on Women’s Development and Secretary-General
of the United Nations Conference on Palestine from 1982
to 1987.
Dr. Mair’s service at the national level was no less distinctive.
The Jamaican government sought her expertise for guidance on developing
policies, measures and programmes intended to advance the status of
its women and to integrate them fully in the process of development.
She functioned as a public servant in several positions, as first Advisor
on Women’s Affairs and head of the Jamaican Information Service
in 1974 and a Deputy Head of Jamaica’s Permanent Mission to the
United Nations in 1975. Dr. Mair was subsequently appointed as Jamaica’s
Ambassador to Cuba. In a second round of service to the Jamaica government,
she was appointed a Senator and Minister of State in the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs and in 1992 was appointed to the substantive post of
Permanent Representative for Jamaica to the United Nations. In spite
of her rigorous diplomatic and other professional engagements Dr. Mair,
remarkably, was able to serve as member of or representative on several
international and regional boards and committees including the Board
of Governors of the International Development Research Council in Canada,
the Population Council (U.S.A.) and the International Conference on
Apartheid in Nigeria. She worked with diligence to impact in positive
ways the lives of women in the Caribbean as a regional coordinator
of the Women and Development Studies Unit (WAND) of the UWI. Her career
of committed service and extraordinary achievements in the realms of
diplomacy, development and women’s advancement won her local,
regional and international recognition. Among the awards she received
is the OAS Women of Distinction Award in 1987 and the national honours
of Commander of the Order of Distinction and the Order of Jamaica.
She has the remarkable distinction of being conferred Honorary Doctorates
from three universities, the University of the West Indies, the University
of Florida and the University of Ulster in Ireland.
Dr. Mair has produced many publications. The breadth and diversity
of her work has served to widen the scope of actions targeting women
and their advancement in the Region.
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