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Peter Høj

Peter Bordier Høj AC FAA FTSE FNAI(US) (born 29 April 1957) is a Danish-Australian academic and Vice-Chancellor and President of the University of Adelaide. He has previously served as Vice-Chancellor and President of the University of Queensland and the University of South Australia.[1] Educated at the University of Copenhagen, Høj completed a Bachelor of Science where he majored in biochemistry and chemistry, a Master of Science in biochemistry and genetics and a Doctor of Philosophy in Photosynthesis.[2] He has worked in Denmark and Australia as a researcher and published multiple scientific articles. Høj has also served on a number of different company boards in a variety of roles, including current roles on the boards of CSIRO, Wine Australia and of the Australian Cancer Research Foundation.[3] In 2017 he was elected chair of the Group of Eight, a lobby group that represents Australia’s research-intensive universities.[4] He was the vice-chancellor of the University of Queensland from 2012-2020.

Peter Høj
AC FAA FTSE FNAI(US)
Chancellor and President of the University of Adelaide
Assumed office
8 February 2020
ChancellorCatherine Branson
Preceded by
Vice-Chancellor and President of the University of Queensland
In office
8 October 2012 – 31 July 2020
ChancellorPeter Varghese
Preceded byDeborah Terry (acting)
Succeeded byDeborah Terry
Vice-Chancellor and President of University of South Australia
In office
2007–2012
Chancellor
Preceded byDenise Bradley
Succeeded byDavid Lloyd
Personal details
Born
Peter Bordier Høj

(1957-04-29) 29 April 1957 (age 66)
Copenhagen, Denmark
Citizenship
  • Denmark
  • Australia
Spouse
Robyn van Heeswijk
(m. 1956; died 2003)
Children2
Education
AwardsBoehringer-Mannheim Medal (1992)

Early years and education edit

Peter Høj was born in 1957, to John and Bodil Høj in Copenhagen, Denmark where he attended high school at Birkerød Statsskole. He worked in a deer meat shop with his father while at school.[5] Høj attended the University of Copenhagen, with a focus on biochemistry and chemistry. He continued his study at the Carlsberg Laboratory where he obtained a Master of Science degree in biochemistry and genetics. Furthermore he completed his PhD in photosynthesis at Denmark’s Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University (now University of Copenhagen). Høj relocated to Melbourne in 1987 with his then partner Robyn van Heeswijk. In Melbourne, he attended the La Trobe University as a post-doctorate fellow.[6]

Career edit

In his first year at the La Trobe University he became a professor and he also obtained his own laboratory. In 1992, Høj was awarded the Boehringer-Mannheim (now the Roche Molecular Biochemicals) Medal which was then awarded to outstanding biochemists and molecular biologists under the age of 40. The University of Adelaide offered him a position as a professor of viticulture in 1994 and he was a professor at the university until September 2004.[7] In 1997, he became the managing director of the Australian Wine Research Institute. He was the CEO of the Australian Research Council from 2004 to 2007. He served as the Vice-Chancellor and President of the University of South Australia from 2007 to 2012, of the University of Queensland from 2012-2020, and of The University of Adelaide from 2021.

Vice-Chancellor and President of the University of South Australia edit

Høj was Vice-Chancellor and President of the University of South Australia from 2007 to 2012. While at the university he was very clear in his support for the merging of the University of South Australia with the University of Adelaide. When asked about the merging of the universities he said, ‘I've been very vocal on it and I clearly believe that none of the three SA universities have enough scale ... it will have to happen.’[8] Høj ended up accepting a role as the Vice-Chancellor and President at the University of Queensland after the merger talks failed to reach a conclusion that resulted in the two universities combining.[9]

Vice-Chancellor and President of the University of Queensland edit

 
UQ St Lucia

Høj became Vice-Chancellor and President of the University of Queensland on 8 October 2012 and was preceded by Deborah Terry who was acting Vice-Chancellor at the time. He replaced previous Vice-Chancellor Paul Greenfield, who resigned due to a nepotism admissions scandal that allowed his daughter to be admitted to the University of Queensland medical school without meeting all the requirements. The deputy Michael Keniger also left the university due to the scandal.[10] The Chancellor of the University of Queensland, Peter Varghese, highlighted numerous different successes of Høj in his role during a recent interview. He said that “(Høj) led the development of UQ’s first philanthropic campaign, which has now raised $400 million of our $500 million target” and “When Peter took up the Vice-Chancellor position, UQ was ranked 90 in the Academic Ranking of World Universities, today it is ranked 55” he said.[11]

Hanban edit

Høj joined Hanban (Council of Confucius Institute Headquarter) as an unpaid senior consultant in 2013 and was later appointed a member of the governing council of Confucius Institute Headquarters in 2017. He stood down in late 2018 from his position due to legal advice surrounding his required signing of Australia's new Foreign Interference Transparency Scheme. Høj’s involvement with the Institute was seen as controversial after a Four Corners investigation by the ABC found that the Chinese government and the UQ Confucius Institute had co-funded four University of Queensland courses. Furthermore a separate investigation by Four Corner’s highlighted that the Confucius Institute had been involved with honorary staff appointments and curriculum development at the University of Queensland. In May 2019 the UQ senate ceased accepting funding from the Confucius Institute. When interviewed about the situation Høj explained, "having courses concerning China is totally appropriate". He further said "It's very appropriate for universities such as ours to educate our students about Chinese politics, Chinese economics because we live in a region where China will be the largest economy in the world very soon, the largest trading partner for Australia". When questioned on the institute's involvement he said,"Is it appropriate that a Confucius Institute devises courses? No, it's not, but they don't. They're not involved in the design of the course. They're not involved in the delivery.”. The investigation interviewed Ross Babbage, senior security adviser to the federal government, and Clive Hamilton, an academic who focuses primarily on the interference of the Chinese Communist Party at Australian universities, both suggested a review into the universities' relationship with the institute. Furthermore Høj, when asked if he was influenced by the Chinese Communist party during his time at the Confucius Institute, said, "I'm very confident that I haven't been influenced."[12]

The Ramsay Centre edit

During his time as Vice-Chancellor, Høj introduced a partnership with the Ramsay Centre. The Ramsey Centre is a philanthropic institute designed “to advance education by promoting studies and discussion associated with the establishment and development of western civilisation”.[13] Høj and the university proceeded to sign a fifty million dollar deal with the Ramsay Centre to offer an extended major in Western civilisation. The deal saw the University of Queensland obtain $50 million to fund the course, offer 30 scholarships each year worth $30,000 to students and hire 10 full-time equivalent academic staff. Høj welcomed the major, highlighting that this was a rare deal that will benefit many students. Alternatively there was much public debate about the introduction of the major, with many staff, students and members of the public disagreeing with the decision over fears of academic freedom.[13]

Controversy with Drew Pavlou edit

 
Drew Pavlou Stop Uyghur Genocide Rally

Høj also had to deal with the controversy surrounding student Drew Pavlou, who organised many rallies supporting Hong Kong against China, and protests of UQ’s financial ties with China via the Confucius Institute. Drew was originally suspended for serious misconduct for two years.[14] However, the university reduced it to a semester after an appeal to the university's Senate Disciplinary Appeals Committee (SDAC). The University of Queensland was severely criticized by Liberal and National MP’s such as Dave Sharma and Matt Canavan who said that this incident “only fuelled claims that UQ was pro-China before it is pro-student".[15] Current affairs program 60 Minutes conducted an investigation on the incident causing Høj to make a statement via email that reiterated there were no foreign influence on decisions made at the university or impact the freedom of speech on campus.[16]

He retired from his position as Vice-Chancellor and President at the University of Queensland on 31 July 2020 after having announced his resignation in May 2019. He was replaced by Deborah Terry.[11]

Notable Published Works edit

Peter Høj has published a number of journal articles. These include but are not limited to:

  • Identification of a chloroplast-encoded 9-kDa polypeptide as a 2[4Fe-4S] protein carrying centers, 1987, journal article in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, written with Ib Svendsen, Henrik Vibe Scheller, and Birger Lindberg Møller.[17]
  • Molecular evolution of plant β‐glucan endohydrolases, 1995, journal article in The Plant Journal, written with Geoffrey B. Fincher[18]
  • Do cytosolic factors prevent promiscuity at the membrane surface?, 1993, journal article in the FEBS Letters journal, written with Trevor Lithgow and Nicholas J. Hoogenraad[19]
  • The 'haze proteins' of wine - A summary of properties, factors affecting their accumulation in grapes, and the amount of bentonite required for their removal from wine. (2000). Proceedings of the ASEV 50th Anniversary Annual Meeting. 149-154, written with D.B Tattersall, K. Adams, K.F. Pocock, Yoji Hayasaka and R. Heeswijck[20]
  • Resistance to an Herbivore Through Engineered Cyanogenic Glucoside Synthesis. Science. 293. 1826-8. 10.1126/science.1062249. (2001) The entire pathway for synthesis of the tyrosine-derived cyanogenic glucoside dhurrin has been transferred from Sorghum bicolor to Arabidopsis thaliana. Here, we document that genetically engineered plants are able to synthesize and store large amounts of new natural products. The presence of dhurrin in the transgenic A. thaliana plants confers resistance to the flea beetle Phyllotreta nemorum, which is a natural pest of other members of the crucifer group, demonstrating the potential utility of cyanogenic glucosides in plant defense. Written with David Tattersall, Søren Bak, Patrik Jones, Carl Olsen, Jens Nielsen, Mads Hansen, and Birger Møller[21]
  • Multiple glucosyltransferase activities in the grapevine Vitis vinifera L. (2008). Australian Journal of Grape and Wine Research. 4. 48 - 58. 10.1111/j.1755-0238.1998.tb00134.x. Written with Christopher Ford[22]
  • Cloning and Characterization of Vitis viniferaUDP-Glucose:Flavonoid 3-O-Glucosyltransferase, a Homologue of the Enzyme Encoded by the Maize Bronze-1Locus That May Primarily Serve to Glucosylate Anthocyanidins in Vivo. (1998). The Journal of biological chemistry. 273. 9224-33. 10.1074/jbc.273.15.9224. Written with Christopher Ford and Paul Boss[23]
  • Identification and characterization of a fruit-specific thaumatin-like protein which accumulates at very low levels in conjunction with the onset of sugar accumulation and berry softening in. (1997). Plant physiology. 114. 759-69. Written with D. Tattersall and R. Heeswijck[24]

Appointments, memberships, honours and awards edit

Høj is currently a board member of Wine Australia and of the Australian Cancer Research Foundation. He was a board member at the CSIRO from 2011-2014.[25] He was the deputy chair of Universities Australia and chair of the Group of Eight (Go8) research intensive universities. Høj has served as a private member of the Prime Minister's Science Engineering and Innovation Council (1999-2004) and as an ex-officio member (2006-2007). In 2016 he became a member of the Leadership Council on Cultural Diversity[26] and a member of STEM Males Champions of Change,.[27] He is a member of the Steering Group for IP Group ANZ.[28] Høj is a fellow of the Australian Academy of Science, of the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences,[29] a fellow of the (US) National Academy of Inventors and Engineering and a foreign member (Natural Sciences Class) of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters.[30] He is an immediate past member of the Australian government’s Medical Research Advisory Board (April 2016 to July 2020).[31] He was awarded the Centenary Medal in 2002 by the Australian Government for his services to Science and the Australian wine industry.[32] In 2015 he received the 2015 Outstanding Individual of the Year Award from the Council of Confucius Institute also known as Hanban.[33] He was made a Companion of the Order of Australia (AC), Australia's highest civil order, in January 2019 for "eminent service to higher education and to science, particularly to the commercialisation of research, and to policy development and reform."[34] In April 2019, the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) presented Høj with its Asia-Pacific Leadership Award.[35] Høj has five honorary doctorates, from the University of Copenhagen, the University of South Australia, The University of Adelaide, La Trobe University, and The University of Queensland.[36] He was elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science in 2022.[37]

Personal life edit

Høj met and later married Dr Robyn van Heeswijk (1956-2003). She was an Australian researcher whom he met while he was studying and working in the Carlsberg Laboratory. His wife died of breast cancer in September 2003 at the age of 47. He has two children, a son Torbjørn, and daughter, Stine. He moved to Australia in 1987, and Høj is a dual Australian/Danish citizen.

Høj’s current partner is Mandy Thomas, the former executive dean of the Creative Industries Faculty at Queensland University of Technology, and former Pro Vice-Chancellor Research at The Australian National University.

References edit

  1. ^ "Professor Peter Hoj". Home. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  2. ^ Scott, L., 2020. Meet UQ’S Knight In Shining Armour. [online] Couriermail.com.au.
  3. ^ "Our Board". www.wineaustralia.com. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  4. ^ "Go8 Media Release: Go8 elects Professor Peter Høj as 2017 Chair". Group of Eight. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  5. ^ Moore, Tony (15 July 2020). "New vice-chancellor for University of Queensland starts in August". Brisbane Times. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  6. ^ La Trobe University. (2020). Biochemistry at La Trobe University: A Proud History [Ebook] (p. 10). Retrieved 17 November 2020, from chrome-extension://gphandlahdpffmccakmbngmbjnjiiahp/https://www.latrobe.edu.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0006/1007790/Biochemistry-at-LTU.pdf.
  7. ^ Nardelli, M. (2020). New Vice Chancellor on deck. W3.unisa.edu.au. Retrieved 17 November 2020, from http://w3.unisa.edu.au/news/2007/310507.asp.
  8. ^ Richardson, Tom (29 November 2018). "Uni merger would have helped make SA a "strong prospect", says former VC". InDaily. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  9. ^ Holderhead, S. (2020). Outgoing uni boss has one regret. adelaidenow.com.au. Retrieved 17 November 2020, from https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/south-australia/outgoing-uni-boss-reveals-one-regret-as-he-prepares-to-leave/news-story/eac474cec9814704d56b3cc994c5a279.
  10. ^ Calligeros, Marissa (16 September 2013). "UQ medical student didn't know vice-chancellor father was pulling strings". Brisbane Times. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  11. ^ a b Moore, Tony (15 July 2020). "New vice-chancellor for University of Queensland starts in August". Brisbane Times. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  12. ^ "The Chinese Government co-funded at least four University of Queensland courses". ABC News. 14 October 2019. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  13. ^ a b "Ramsay Centre-funded Western Civilisation program to start at UQ in 2020". UQ News. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  14. ^ "'There is a vendetta': Why an Australian student who is anti-Beijing is facing expulsion from the University of Queensland". ABC News. 23 April 2020. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  15. ^ Dennien, Toby Crockford, Matt (13 July 2020). "UQ rejects student activist Drew Pavlou's appeal, upholds suspension until 2021". Brisbane Times. Retrieved 11 October 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ Stone, Lucy (17 July 2020). "UQ defends free speech record, warns China 'shift' could hurt economy". Brisbane Times. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  17. ^ Høj, P & Svendsen, IB & Scheller, Henrik & Møller, Birger. (1987). Identification of a chloroplast-encoded 9-kDa polypeptide as a 2[4Fe-4S] protein carrying centers A and B of photosystem I. The Journal of biological chemistry. 262. 12676-84.
  18. ^ Hoj, Peter & Fincher, Geoffrey. (1995). Molecular evolution of plant β‐glucan endohydrolases. The Plant journal : for cell and molecular biology. 7. 367-79. 10.1046/j.1365-313X.1995.7030367.x.
  19. ^ Lithgow, Trevor & Høj, Peter & Hoogenraad, Nicholas. (1993). Do cytosolic factors prevent promiscuity at the membrane surface?. FEBS letters. 329. 1-4. 10.1016/0014-5793(93)80179-X.
  20. ^ Høj, P.B. & Tattersall, D.B. & Adams, K. & Pocock, K.F. & Hayasaka, Yoji & Heeswijck, R. & Waters, Elizabeth. (2000). The 'haze proteins' of wine - A summary of properties, factors affecting their accumulation in grapes, and the amount of bentonite required for their removal from wine. Proceedings of the ASEV 50th Anniversary Annual Meeting. 149-154.
  21. ^ Tattersall, David & Bak, Søren & Jones, Patrik & Olsen, Carl & Nielsen, Jens & Hansen, Mads & Høj, Peter & Møller, Birger. (2001). Resistance to an Herbivore Through Engineered Cyanogenic Glucoside Synthesis. Science. 293. 1826-8. 10.1126/science.1062249. The entire pathway for synthesis of the tyrosine-derived cyanogenic glucoside dhurrin has been transferred from Sorghum bicolor to Arabidopsis thaliana. Here, we document that genetically engineered plants are able to synthesize and store large amounts of new natural products. The presence of dhurrin in the transgenic A. thaliana plants confers resistance to the flea beetle Phyllotreta nemorum, which is a natural pest of other members of the crucifer group, demonstrating the potential utility of cyanogenic glucosides in plant defense.
  22. ^ Ford, Christopher & HØJ, P.. (2008). Multiple glucosyltransferase activities in the grapevine Vitis vinifera L. Australian Journal of Grape and Wine Research. 4. 48 - 58. 10.1111/j.1755-0238.1998.tb00134.x.
  23. ^ Ford, Christopher & Boss, Paul & Høj, Peter. (1998). Cloning and Characterization of Vitis viniferaUDP-Glucose:Flavonoid 3-O-Glucosyltransferase, a Homologue of the Enzyme Encoded by the Maize Bronze-1Locus That May Primarily Serve to Glucosylate Anthocyanidins in Vivo. The Journal of biological chemistry. 273. 9224-33. 10.1074/jbc.273.15.9224.
  24. ^ Tattersall, D & Heeswijck, R & Høj, P. (1997). Identification and characterization of a fruit-specific thaumatin-like protein which accumulates at very low levels in conjunction with the onset of sugar accumulation and berry softening in. Plant physiology. 114. 759-69.
  25. ^ CSIRO. "Board membership". www.csiro.au. from the original on 30 August 2020. Retrieved 30 January 2019.
  26. ^ "News". humanrights.gov.au. 9 October 2023. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  27. ^ Unknown. (2020). Peter Høj | Male Champions of Change. Malechampionsofchange.com. Retrieved 17 November 2020, from https://malechampionsofchange.com/champions/peter-hoj/.
  28. ^ "Our people". www.ipgroupanz.com. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  29. ^ Inc., Advanced Solutions International. . www.atse.org.au. Archived from the original on 8 April 2017. Retrieved 19 July 2017. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  30. ^ "Academy honours UQ's innovative Vice-Chancellor". UQ News. from the original on 30 January 2019. Retrieved 30 January 2019.
  31. ^ "Members:Australian Medical Research Advisory Board (AMRAB)". Australian Government Department of Health. 2 May 2018. from the original on 30 August 2020. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  32. ^ (PDF). Governor General of Australia. 26 January 2019. p. 7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 January 2019. Retrieved 30 January 2019.
  33. ^ The University of Queensland, UQ News (7 December 2015). "UQ Vice-Chancellor receives Confucian award from China's Vice-Premier". UQ News. from the original on 30 August 2020. Retrieved 30 January 2019.
  34. ^ "Australia Day honour for UQ Vice-Chancellor". UQ News. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  35. ^ "Professor Peter Høj AC | CASE". www.case.org. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  36. ^ "About Professor Peter Høj AC". Office of the Vice-Chancellor and President | University of Adelaide. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  37. ^ "Academy announces 2022 Fellows for outstanding contributions to science". Australian Academy of Science. 26 May 2022. Retrieved 25 May 2022.

peter, høj, peter, bordier, høj, ftse, fnai, born, april, 1957, danish, australian, academic, vice, chancellor, president, university, adelaide, previously, served, vice, chancellor, president, university, queensland, university, south, australia, educated, un. Peter Bordier Hoj AC FAA FTSE FNAI US born 29 April 1957 is a Danish Australian academic and Vice Chancellor and President of the University of Adelaide He has previously served as Vice Chancellor and President of the University of Queensland and the University of South Australia 1 Educated at the University of Copenhagen Hoj completed a Bachelor of Science where he majored in biochemistry and chemistry a Master of Science in biochemistry and genetics and a Doctor of Philosophy in Photosynthesis 2 He has worked in Denmark and Australia as a researcher and published multiple scientific articles Hoj has also served on a number of different company boards in a variety of roles including current roles on the boards of CSIRO Wine Australia and of the Australian Cancer Research Foundation 3 In 2017 he was elected chair of the Group of Eight a lobby group that represents Australia s research intensive universities 4 He was the vice chancellor of the University of Queensland from 2012 2020 Peter HojAC FAA FTSE FNAI US Chancellor and President of the University of AdelaideIncumbentAssumed office 8 February 2020ChancellorCatherine BransonPreceded byPeter Rathjen official Mike Brooks acting Vice Chancellor and President of the University of QueenslandIn office 8 October 2012 31 July 2020ChancellorPeter VarghesePreceded byDeborah Terry acting Succeeded byDeborah TerryVice Chancellor and President of University of South AustraliaIn office 2007 2012ChancellorIan GouldJim McDowellPreceded byDenise BradleySucceeded byDavid LloydPersonal detailsBornPeter Bordier Hoj 1957 04 29 29 April 1957 age 66 Copenhagen DenmarkCitizenshipDenmarkAustraliaSpouseRobyn van Heeswijk m 1956 died 2003 wbr Children2EducationUniv of Copenhagen BSc Carlsberg Laboratory MSc Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University PhD AwardsBoehringer Mannheim Medal 1992 Contents 1 Early years and education 2 Career 2 1 Vice Chancellor and President of the University of South Australia 2 2 Vice Chancellor and President of the University of Queensland 2 2 1 Hanban 2 2 2 The Ramsay Centre 2 2 3 Controversy with Drew Pavlou 2 3 Notable Published Works 3 Appointments memberships honours and awards 4 Personal life 5 ReferencesEarly years and education editPeter Hoj was born in 1957 to John and Bodil Hoj in Copenhagen Denmark where he attended high school at Birkerod Statsskole He worked in a deer meat shop with his father while at school 5 Hoj attended the University of Copenhagen with a focus on biochemistry and chemistry He continued his study at the Carlsberg Laboratory where he obtained a Master of Science degree in biochemistry and genetics Furthermore he completed his PhD in photosynthesis at Denmark s Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University now University of Copenhagen Hoj relocated to Melbourne in 1987 with his then partner Robyn van Heeswijk In Melbourne he attended the La Trobe University as a post doctorate fellow 6 Career editIn his first year at the La Trobe University he became a professor and he also obtained his own laboratory In 1992 Hoj was awarded the Boehringer Mannheim now the Roche Molecular Biochemicals Medal which was then awarded to outstanding biochemists and molecular biologists under the age of 40 The University of Adelaide offered him a position as a professor of viticulture in 1994 and he was a professor at the university until September 2004 7 In 1997 he became the managing director of the Australian Wine Research Institute He was the CEO of the Australian Research Council from 2004 to 2007 He served as the Vice Chancellor and President of the University of South Australia from 2007 to 2012 of the University of Queensland from 2012 2020 and of The University of Adelaide from 2021 Vice Chancellor and President of the University of South Australia edit Hoj was Vice Chancellor and President of the University of South Australia from 2007 to 2012 While at the university he was very clear in his support for the merging of the University of South Australia with the University of Adelaide When asked about the merging of the universities he said I ve been very vocal on it and I clearly believe that none of the three SA universities have enough scale it will have to happen 8 Hoj ended up accepting a role as the Vice Chancellor and President at the University of Queensland after the merger talks failed to reach a conclusion that resulted in the two universities combining 9 Vice Chancellor and President of the University of Queensland edit nbsp UQ St LuciaHoj became Vice Chancellor and President of the University of Queensland on 8 October 2012 and was preceded by Deborah Terry who was acting Vice Chancellor at the time He replaced previous Vice Chancellor Paul Greenfield who resigned due to a nepotism admissions scandal that allowed his daughter to be admitted to the University of Queensland medical school without meeting all the requirements The deputy Michael Keniger also left the university due to the scandal 10 The Chancellor of the University of Queensland Peter Varghese highlighted numerous different successes of Hoj in his role during a recent interview He said that Hoj led the development of UQ s first philanthropic campaign which has now raised 400 million of our 500 million target and When Peter took up the Vice Chancellor position UQ was ranked 90 in the Academic Ranking of World Universities today it is ranked 55 he said 11 Hanban edit Hoj joined Hanban Council of Confucius Institute Headquarter as an unpaid senior consultant in 2013 and was later appointed a member of the governing council of Confucius Institute Headquarters in 2017 He stood down in late 2018 from his position due to legal advice surrounding his required signing of Australia s new Foreign Interference Transparency Scheme Hoj s involvement with the Institute was seen as controversial after a Four Corners investigation by the ABC found that the Chinese government and the UQ Confucius Institute had co funded four University of Queensland courses Furthermore a separate investigation by Four Corner s highlighted that the Confucius Institute had been involved with honorary staff appointments and curriculum development at the University of Queensland In May 2019 the UQ senate ceased accepting funding from the Confucius Institute When interviewed about the situation Hoj explained having courses concerning China is totally appropriate He further said It s very appropriate for universities such as ours to educate our students about Chinese politics Chinese economics because we live in a region where China will be the largest economy in the world very soon the largest trading partner for Australia When questioned on the institute s involvement he said Is it appropriate that a Confucius Institute devises courses No it s not but they don t They re not involved in the design of the course They re not involved in the delivery The investigation interviewed Ross Babbage senior security adviser to the federal government and Clive Hamilton an academic who focuses primarily on the interference of the Chinese Communist Party at Australian universities both suggested a review into the universities relationship with the institute Furthermore Hoj when asked if he was influenced by the Chinese Communist party during his time at the Confucius Institute said I m very confident that I haven t been influenced 12 The Ramsay Centre edit During his time as Vice Chancellor Hoj introduced a partnership with the Ramsay Centre The Ramsey Centre is a philanthropic institute designed to advance education by promoting studies and discussion associated with the establishment and development of western civilisation 13 Hoj and the university proceeded to sign a fifty million dollar deal with the Ramsay Centre to offer an extended major in Western civilisation The deal saw the University of Queensland obtain 50 million to fund the course offer 30 scholarships each year worth 30 000 to students and hire 10 full time equivalent academic staff Hoj welcomed the major highlighting that this was a rare deal that will benefit many students Alternatively there was much public debate about the introduction of the major with many staff students and members of the public disagreeing with the decision over fears of academic freedom 13 Controversy with Drew Pavlou edit nbsp Drew Pavlou Stop Uyghur Genocide RallyHoj also had to deal with the controversy surrounding student Drew Pavlou who organised many rallies supporting Hong Kong against China and protests of UQ s financial ties with China via the Confucius Institute Drew was originally suspended for serious misconduct for two years 14 However the university reduced it to a semester after an appeal to the university s Senate Disciplinary Appeals Committee SDAC The University of Queensland was severely criticized by Liberal and National MP s such as Dave Sharma and Matt Canavan who said that this incident only fuelled claims that UQ was pro China before it is pro student 15 Current affairs program 60 Minutes conducted an investigation on the incident causing Hoj to make a statement via email that reiterated there were no foreign influence on decisions made at the university or impact the freedom of speech on campus 16 He retired from his position as Vice Chancellor and President at the University of Queensland on 31 July 2020 after having announced his resignation in May 2019 He was replaced by Deborah Terry 11 Notable Published Works edit Peter Hoj has published a number of journal articles These include but are not limited to Identification of a chloroplast encoded 9 kDa polypeptide as a 2 4Fe 4S protein carrying centers 1987 journal article in the Journal of Biological Chemistry written with Ib Svendsen Henrik Vibe Scheller and Birger Lindberg Moller 17 Molecular evolution of plant b glucan endohydrolases 1995 journal article in The Plant Journal written with Geoffrey B Fincher 18 Do cytosolic factors prevent promiscuity at the membrane surface 1993 journal article in the FEBS Letters journal written with Trevor Lithgow and Nicholas J Hoogenraad 19 The haze proteins of wine A summary of properties factors affecting their accumulation in grapes and the amount of bentonite required for their removal from wine 2000 Proceedings of the ASEV 50th Anniversary Annual Meeting 149 154 written with D B Tattersall K Adams K F Pocock Yoji Hayasaka and R Heeswijck 20 Resistance to an Herbivore Through Engineered Cyanogenic Glucoside Synthesis Science 293 1826 8 10 1126 science 1062249 2001 The entire pathway for synthesis of the tyrosine derived cyanogenic glucoside dhurrin has been transferred from Sorghum bicolor to Arabidopsis thaliana Here we document that genetically engineered plants are able to synthesize and store large amounts of new natural products The presence of dhurrin in the transgenic A thaliana plants confers resistance to the flea beetle Phyllotreta nemorum which is a natural pest of other members of the crucifer group demonstrating the potential utility of cyanogenic glucosides in plant defense Written with David Tattersall Soren Bak Patrik Jones Carl Olsen Jens Nielsen Mads Hansen and Birger Moller 21 Multiple glucosyltransferase activities in the grapevine Vitis vinifera L 2008 Australian Journal of Grape and Wine Research 4 48 58 10 1111 j 1755 0238 1998 tb00134 x Written with Christopher Ford 22 Cloning and Characterization of Vitis viniferaUDP Glucose Flavonoid 3 O Glucosyltransferase a Homologue of the Enzyme Encoded by the Maize Bronze 1Locus That May Primarily Serve to Glucosylate Anthocyanidins in Vivo 1998 The Journal of biological chemistry 273 9224 33 10 1074 jbc 273 15 9224 Written with Christopher Ford and Paul Boss 23 Identification and characterization of a fruit specific thaumatin like protein which accumulates at very low levels in conjunction with the onset of sugar accumulation and berry softening in 1997 Plant physiology 114 759 69 Written with D Tattersall and R Heeswijck 24 Appointments memberships honours and awards editHoj is currently a board member of Wine Australia and of the Australian Cancer Research Foundation He was a board member at the CSIRO from 2011 2014 25 He was the deputy chair of Universities Australia and chair of the Group of Eight Go8 research intensive universities Hoj has served as a private member of the Prime Minister s Science Engineering and Innovation Council 1999 2004 and as an ex officio member 2006 2007 In 2016 he became a member of the Leadership Council on Cultural Diversity 26 and a member of STEM Males Champions of Change 27 He is a member of the Steering Group for IP Group ANZ 28 Hoj is a fellow of the Australian Academy of Science of the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences 29 a fellow of the US National Academy of Inventors and Engineering and a foreign member Natural Sciences Class of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters 30 He is an immediate past member of the Australian government s Medical Research Advisory Board April 2016 to July 2020 31 He was awarded the Centenary Medal in 2002 by the Australian Government for his services to Science and the Australian wine industry 32 In 2015 he received the 2015 Outstanding Individual of the Year Award from the Council of Confucius Institute also known as Hanban 33 He was made a Companion of the Order of Australia AC Australia s highest civil order in January 2019 for eminent service to higher education and to science particularly to the commercialisation of research and to policy development and reform 34 In April 2019 the Council for Advancement and Support of Education CASE presented Hoj with its Asia Pacific Leadership Award 35 Hoj has five honorary doctorates from the University of Copenhagen the University of South Australia The University of Adelaide La Trobe University and The University of Queensland 36 He was elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science in 2022 37 Personal life editThis section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living people that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately Find sources Peter Hoj news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Hoj met and later married Dr Robyn van Heeswijk 1956 2003 She was an Australian researcher whom he met while he was studying and working in the Carlsberg Laboratory His wife died of breast cancer in September 2003 at the age of 47 He has two children a son Torbjorn and daughter Stine He moved to Australia in 1987 and Hoj is a dual Australian Danish citizen Hoj s current partner is Mandy Thomas the former executive dean of the Creative Industries Faculty at Queensland University of Technology and former Pro Vice Chancellor Research at The Australian National University References edit Professor Peter Hoj Home Retrieved 11 October 2023 Scott L 2020 Meet UQ S Knight In Shining Armour online Couriermail com au Our Board www wineaustralia com Retrieved 11 October 2023 Go8 Media Release Go8 elects Professor Peter Hoj as 2017 Chair Group of Eight Retrieved 11 October 2023 Moore Tony 15 July 2020 New vice chancellor for University of Queensland starts in August Brisbane Times Retrieved 11 October 2023 La Trobe University 2020 Biochemistry at La Trobe University A Proud History Ebook p 10 Retrieved 17 November 2020 from chrome extension gphandlahdpffmccakmbngmbjnjiiahp https www latrobe edu au data assets pdf file 0006 1007790 Biochemistry at LTU pdf Nardelli M 2020 New Vice Chancellor on deck W3 unisa edu au Retrieved 17 November 2020 from http w3 unisa edu au news 2007 310507 asp Richardson Tom 29 November 2018 Uni merger would have helped make SA a strong prospect says former VC InDaily Retrieved 11 October 2023 Holderhead S 2020 Outgoing uni boss has one regret adelaidenow com au Retrieved 17 November 2020 from https www adelaidenow com au news south australia outgoing uni boss reveals one regret as he prepares to leave news story eac474cec9814704d56b3cc994c5a279 Calligeros Marissa 16 September 2013 UQ medical student didn t know vice chancellor father was pulling strings Brisbane Times Retrieved 11 October 2023 a b Moore Tony 15 July 2020 New vice chancellor for University of Queensland starts in August Brisbane Times Retrieved 11 October 2023 The Chinese Government co funded at least four University of Queensland courses ABC News 14 October 2019 Retrieved 11 October 2023 a b Ramsay Centre funded Western Civilisation program to start at UQ in 2020 UQ News Retrieved 11 October 2023 There is a vendetta Why an Australian student who is anti Beijing is facing expulsion from the University of Queensland ABC News 23 April 2020 Retrieved 11 October 2023 Dennien Toby Crockford Matt 13 July 2020 UQ rejects student activist Drew Pavlou s appeal upholds suspension until 2021 Brisbane Times Retrieved 11 October 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Stone Lucy 17 July 2020 UQ defends free speech record warns China shift could hurt economy Brisbane Times Retrieved 11 October 2023 Hoj P amp Svendsen IB amp Scheller Henrik amp Moller Birger 1987 Identification of a chloroplast encoded 9 kDa polypeptide as a 2 4Fe 4S protein carrying centers A and B of photosystem I The Journal of biological chemistry 262 12676 84 Hoj Peter amp Fincher Geoffrey 1995 Molecular evolution of plant b glucan endohydrolases The Plant journal for cell and molecular biology 7 367 79 10 1046 j 1365 313X 1995 7030367 x Lithgow Trevor amp Hoj Peter amp Hoogenraad Nicholas 1993 Do cytosolic factors prevent promiscuity at the membrane surface FEBS letters 329 1 4 10 1016 0014 5793 93 80179 X Hoj P B amp Tattersall D B amp Adams K amp Pocock K F amp Hayasaka Yoji amp Heeswijck R amp Waters Elizabeth 2000 The haze proteins of wine A summary of properties factors affecting their accumulation in grapes and the amount of bentonite required for their removal from wine Proceedings of the ASEV 50th Anniversary Annual Meeting 149 154 Tattersall David amp Bak Soren amp Jones Patrik amp Olsen Carl amp Nielsen Jens amp Hansen Mads amp Hoj Peter amp Moller Birger 2001 Resistance to an Herbivore Through Engineered Cyanogenic Glucoside Synthesis Science 293 1826 8 10 1126 science 1062249 The entire pathway for synthesis of the tyrosine derived cyanogenic glucoside dhurrin has been transferred from Sorghum bicolor to Arabidopsis thaliana Here we document that genetically engineered plants are able to synthesize and store large amounts of new natural products The presence of dhurrin in the transgenic A thaliana plants confers resistance to the flea beetle Phyllotreta nemorum which is a natural pest of other members of the crucifer group demonstrating the potential utility of cyanogenic glucosides in plant defense Ford Christopher amp HOJ P 2008 Multiple glucosyltransferase activities in the grapevine Vitis vinifera L Australian Journal of Grape and Wine Research 4 48 58 10 1111 j 1755 0238 1998 tb00134 x Ford Christopher amp Boss Paul amp Hoj Peter 1998 Cloning and Characterization of Vitis viniferaUDP Glucose Flavonoid 3 O Glucosyltransferase a Homologue of the Enzyme Encoded by the Maize Bronze 1Locus That May Primarily Serve to Glucosylate Anthocyanidins in Vivo The Journal of biological chemistry 273 9224 33 10 1074 jbc 273 15 9224 Tattersall D amp Heeswijck R amp Hoj P 1997 Identification and characterization of a fruit specific thaumatin like protein which accumulates at very low levels in conjunction with the onset of sugar accumulation and berry softening in Plant physiology 114 759 69 CSIRO Board membership www csiro au Archived from the original on 30 August 2020 Retrieved 30 January 2019 News humanrights gov au 9 October 2023 Retrieved 11 October 2023 Unknown 2020 Peter Hoj Male Champions of Change Malechampionsofchange com Retrieved 17 November 2020 from https malechampionsofchange com champions peter hoj Our people www ipgroupanz com Retrieved 11 October 2023 Inc Advanced Solutions International Fellows Directory Public Australian Academy of Technology and Engineering ATSE www atse org au Archived from the original on 8 April 2017 Retrieved 19 July 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help Academy honours UQ s innovative Vice Chancellor UQ News Archived from the original on 30 January 2019 Retrieved 30 January 2019 Members Australian Medical Research Advisory Board AMRAB Australian Government Department of Health 2 May 2018 Archived from the original on 30 August 2020 Retrieved 29 January 2019 Media Notes Companion AC of the Order of Australia Peter Bordier Hoj PDF Governor General of Australia 26 January 2019 p 7 Archived from the original PDF on 29 January 2019 Retrieved 30 January 2019 The University of Queensland UQ News 7 December 2015 UQ Vice Chancellor receives Confucian award from China s Vice Premier UQ News Archived from the original on 30 August 2020 Retrieved 30 January 2019 Australia Day honour for UQ Vice Chancellor UQ News Retrieved 11 October 2023 Professor Peter Hoj AC CASE www case org Retrieved 11 October 2023 About Professor Peter Hoj AC Office of the Vice Chancellor and President University of Adelaide Retrieved 12 December 2022 Academy announces 2022 Fellows for outstanding contributions to science Australian Academy of Science 26 May 2022 Retrieved 25 May 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peter Hoj amp oldid 1179632136, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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