Robert Jackson (UN administrator)

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Sir Robert Jackson
Department of National Development
In office
17 March 1950 – 30 September 1950
Preceded byHarold Breen
Succeeded byJack Stevens
In office
2 June 1951 – 15 July 1951
Preceded byJack Stevens
Succeeded bySir Harold Raggatt
Personal details
Born
Wilbur Kenneth Jackson

(1911-11-08)8 November 1911
Officer of the Order of the British Empire

Sir Robert Gillman Allen Jackson,

OBE
(8 November 1911 – 12 January 1991) was an Australian naval officer, public servant and United Nations administrator who specialised in technical and logistical assistance to the developing world.

Early life

Jackson was born Wilbur Kenneth Jackson in Melbourne, Victoria, on 8 November 1911. He was educated at Cheltenham High School and Mentone Grammar School, which his father Archibald Jackson had helped found, but his father's death meant he did not go to university and started his career in the Royal Australian Navy at 18.

Career

Jackson was seconded to the

War Cabinet minister in Cairo, and his work with the Middle East Supply Centre
encouraging local food production across many countries fostered his diplomatic and administrative skills.

After the war, Jackson was responsible for the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) projects in Europe, parts of Africa and the Far East, "the biggest UN relief operation ever".[2] Next he was assistant to Trygve Lie, first secretary-general of the UN, with whom he had an awkward working relationship, and then returned to the United Kingdom to work at the Treasury before moving to the Australian Ministry of National Development.

Jackson came to specialise in multiple purpose river development schemes, and his obituary in

Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order in 1962.[4]

From the 1950s onward, he advised the governments of India and Pakistan, and in 1962 he went to the UN as consultant to Paul Hoffman of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), advising on technical, logistical and pre-investment aid to developing countries. By 1971, he had helped with UNDP projects in 60 countries.

The "Jackson Report" or "Capacity Study" on UN reform was published in 1969, urging that UN projects should be harmonised with a country's own development plan, and provoking some controversy. Margaret Anstee, another UN administrator, collaborated with him on this report. They became close personally as well as professionally, and their relationship continued until Jackson's death on 12 January 1991.

Jackson's last major operations were co-ordinating relief for

Companion of the Order of Australia in 1986.[5]

Jackson has been called a "master of logistics"[6] with his work in Malta, UNRRA, and Bangladesh given particular praise.

Personal life

Jackson married

Barbara Ward in 1950, after his first marriage had ended. They had a son in 1956, but were legally separated in the early 1970s.[7]

Jackson died in London on 12 January 1991 of a stroke.[8][9]

References

  1. ^ DNB
  2. , 29 June 1956
  3. , 20 February 1962
  4. ^ It's an Honour – Companion of the Order of Australia
  5. ^ Gibson in DNB
  6. ^ Michael J. Walsh, 'Ward , Barbara Mary, Baroness Jackson of Lodsworth (1914–1981)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Sept 2015 accessed 14 Jan 2017
  7. ^ "Robert Jackson dies". The Canberra Times. 17 January 1991. p. 4.
  8. ^ Costigan, Peter (29 April 1991). "Australian legend got things done". The Canberra Times. p. 8.

Further reading

External links

Government offices
Preceded byas Secretary of the Department of Supply and Development
Department of National Development

1950
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Department of National Development

1951
Succeeded by