Founder
- Jane Goodall Institute & UN Messenger of Peace
Dr. Jane Goodall, DBE, one of the world's most famous
scientists, is known for her landmark study of chimpanzees
in Gombe National Park, Tanzania. In 1977, Dr. Goodall
established the Jane Goodall Institute (JGI), which
supports the Gombe research, is a global leader
in the effort to protect chimpanzees and their habitats,
has been a UN Messenger of Peace since 2002 and
was invested as a Dame of the British Empire by
Prince Charles in 2004. Jane is a riveting corporate speaker and after dinner speaker.
Jane
is a highly accomplished public speaker delivering
fascinating addresses on humanitarian, socio-ecological,
conservation and developing world issues. Jane
is the author of an extensive number of books
and has been featured in many popular television
documentaries.
Jane Goodall began her landmark study of chimpanzees
in Tanzania in June 1960, under the mentorship
of anthropologist and paleontologist Dr. Louis
Leakey. Her work at the Gombe Stream Chimpanzee
Reserve would become the foundation of future
primatological research and redefine the relationship
between humans and animals.
One of Jane's most significant discoveries came
in her first year at Gombe, when she saw chimps
stripping leaves off stems to make the stems useful
for fishing termites out of nearby mounds. This
and subsequent observations of Gombe chimps making
and using tools would force science to rethink
the definition that separated man from other animals:
"man the toolmaker." Jane also observed
chimps hunting and eating bushpigs and other animals,
disproving the widely held belief that chimpanzees
were primarily vegetarians.
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 that empower villagers
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 6,000 worldwide
groups in more than 87 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.
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 øMessenger of Peace.Ó In 2004,
at a ceremony at Buckingham Palace, Prince Charles
invested Dr. Goodall a Dame of the British Empire,
the female equivalent of knighthood.
Her list of publications is extensive, including
two overviews of her work at Gombe - In the Shadow
of Man and Through a Window - as well as two autobiographies
in letters, the best-selling autobiography Reason
for Hope and many children's books. The Chimpanzees
of Gombe: Patterns of Behavior, is recognized
as the definitive work on chimpanzees and is the
culmination of Jane Goodall's scientific career.
Dr. Goodall has been the subject of numerous television
documentaries and is featured in the large-screen
format film, Jane Goodall's Wild Chimpanzees (2002).
In 2004, she was featured in two Discovery Channel
Animal Planet specials-Return to Gombe and The
State of the Great Ape.
For Jane Goodall products and further information please visit:
Jane Goodall books and related products
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