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Judy Messer

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Judy Messer was an Australian conservationist.

Biography

Judy Messer was born in Armadale, Western Australia.[1] Her early life was marked by a close connection to nature due to her upbringing in a rural setting.[2] She pursued nursing as a career and, in the 1970s, obtained a PhD in sociology from the University of New South Wales (UNSW).[3]

In 1957, she married Michael Messer, a biochemistry professor known for his research on marsupial milk.[4] By 1970, she was involved in the establishment of the Lane Cove Bushland and Conservation Society in Greenwich.[5]

From 1984 to 2000, Messer led the Nature Conservation Council (NCC), during which the council addressed various environmental issues in Australia.[6] She served as a non-executive director of Sydney Water from 1988 to 2002.[7]

Messer participated in several global conservation events, including the World Conservation Assemblies and the World Congress on National Parks.[8] In 1993, she was awarded a Churchill Fellowship in the U.S. to study conservation funding mechanisms.[9]

References