The permanent delegate of Australia to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization is an officer of the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and the head of the delegation of the Commonwealth of Australia to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in Paris, France. The position has the rank and status of an ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary and is but one of Australia's representatives to the United Nations and its other bodies, shared with the representatives present at the United Nations Office in Geneva, the United Nations Office in Vienna, the United Nations Office at Nairobi, and the delegation to the United Nations Agencies in Rome.

The permanent delegate, since January 2020, isMegan Anderson.

Posting history

Australia has been a member of UNESCO since its establishment on 4 November 1946, with the permanent delegation based in the Australian Embassy in Paris. In 1977, Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser offered the position of Permanent Delegate to UNESCO to Sir John Kerr, who as Governor-General had been responsible for the dismissal of Gough Whitlam's government in the 1975 Australian constitutional crisis, but considerable public pressure prompted Fraser to withdraw the offer to Kerr, and offer the post to Professor Ralph Slatyer instead. At various periods of the office's history the Australian Permanent Delegate has been held by the Australian Ambassador to France. Since 1990 the Permanent Delegate has been typically held by the Deputy Head of Mission in Paris, who also serves since 2010 as Australia's non-resident Ambassador to the Republic of Chad.

List of permanent delegates

#OfficeholderOther officesTerm start dateTerm end dateTime in officeNotes
1Dr William Gardner Daviesn/a4 November 1946(1946-11-04)1972(1972)25–26 years
2Alan RenoufAOctober 1972(1972-10)December 1973(1973-12)1 year, 2 months
3Harold David AndersonAJanuary 1974(1974-01)August 1975(1975-08)1 year, 7 months
4James Oswinn/aSeptember 1975(1975-09)September 1976(1976-09)1 year
(3)Harold David AndersonAOctober 1976(1976-10)August 1978(1978-08)1 year, 10 months
5Prof. Ralph Slatyern/aSeptember 1978(1978-09)September 1981(1981-09)3 years
6Prof. Owen HarriesFebruary 1982(1982-02)August 1983(1983-08)1 year, 6 months
7Gough WhitlamAugust 1983(1983-08)October 1986(1986-10)3 years, 2 months
8Charles MottNovember 1986(1986-11)January 1988(1988-01)1 year, 2 months
10Ted PocockAJanuary 1988(1988-01)September 1990(1990-09)2 years, 8 months
11John Landern/aSeptember 1990(1990-09)January 1991(1991-01)4 months
12Dr Malcolm LeaderFebruary 1991(1991-02)April 1991(1991-04)2 months
13Dr Robert MerrilleesMay 1991(1991-05)August 1991(1991-08)3 months
14Ross BurnsSeptember 1991(1991-09)September 1992(1992-09)1 year
15Mark PierceSeptember 1992(1992-09)March 1994(1994-03)1 year, 6 months
16Alan BrownAMarch 1994(1994-03)September 1996(1996-09)2 years, 6 months
17Peter Shannonn/aOctober 1996(1996-10)January 1999(1999-01)2 years, 3 months
18Matthew PeekJanuary 1999(1999-01)January 2003(2003-01)4 years
19Jane MaddenJanuary 2003(2003-01)January 2007(2007-01)4 years
20Sally MansfieldBJanuary 2007(2007-01)20 April 2010(2010-04-20)3 years, 3 months
21Gita KamathB20 April 2010(2010-04-20)26 June 2013(2013-06-26)3 years, 67 days
22George MinaB9 September 2013(2013-09-09)20 January 2017(2017-01-20)3 years, 133 days
23Angus MackenzieB20 January 2017(2017-01-20)13 January 2020(2020-01-13)2 years, 358 days
24Megan AndersonB13 January 2020(2020-01-13)Incumbent6 years, 132 days

Notes

^A Also Ambassador to France.

^B Also non-resident Ambassador to Chad, 2010–present.

See also

External links