Ian Kemish

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Ian Kemish
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Ian Kemish, AM (born 18 July 1961) is an Australian author, international relations specialist and not-for-profit chair. He is a former senior diplomat and business executive. During his career with the Australian Government he served as Australian High Commissioner to Papua New Guinea, Australian ambassador to Germany, head of the consular and Southeast Asia Divisions of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, and head of the Prime Minister's International Division. As of 2023 he is co-founder of international strategic advisory firm Forridel, adjunct professor in History at the University of Queensland, an expert associate of the ANU National Security College, and Chair and Industry Fellow for the Griffith Asia Institute advisory council. His book The Consul, released in July 2022, provides an insider account on more than 20 years of international crisis management by the Australian consular service. [1] [2]

Contents

Early life and education

Kemish was born in the United Kingdom and grew up in Australia and Papua New Guinea. He attended elementary school in Lae, Rabaul, and then Port Moresby, [3] and secondary school in Darwin and Brisbane, Australia. Kemish graduated with Honours in modern Southeast Asian history from the University of Queensland. He began his career as a secondary school teacher, working with Aboriginal and Torres Strait islanders in Queensland. He speaks Indonesian, German, and Papua New Guinea Tok Pisin. [4]

Career

Government

Ian Kemish with former German chancellor Angela Merkel Ian Kemish with former German chancellor Angela Merkel.png
Ian Kemish with former German chancellor Angela Merkel

Kemish's 25-year diplomatic career included service as Head of the Australian Prime Minister's International Division from 2004 to 2005, Australian Ambassador to Germany and Switzerland from 2006 to 2009, [5] and Australian High Commissioner to Papua New Guinea from February 2010 to March 2013. [6]

He served earlier as Head of the Southeast Asia and Consular Divisions at the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, and in several other embassies in the Indo Pacific and Europe. Ian Kemish worked as a diplomat in Bosnia and other countries of former Yugoslavia during the conflict of the mid-1990s.

Ian Kemish with former PNG prime minister Sir Michael Somare Ian Kemish with former PNG prime minister Sir Michael Somare.png
Ian Kemish with former PNG prime minister Sir Michael Somare

Kemish was awarded membership of the Order of Australia for his leadership of Australia's emergency response to the 2002 Bali bombings, in his capacity as head of the Australian consular service and chair of the Inter-Departmental Emergency Task Force. His time as head of the consular service also included the September 11 attacks in the United States and a range of other high profile crises and individual cases. [7] </ref>

Private sector

Kemish joined the private sector in 2013, taking on different leadership roles in the internationally focused resource sector, located in Washington and then Melbourne. In March 2020 he retired from the position of Chief People and Sustainability Officer at Newcrest Mining Limited where he had global accountability for sustainability, government and community relations, communications and human resources across Newcrest's jurisdictions in Australia, the Asia Pacific and the Americas. [4] He oversaw Newcrest's adoption of an overarching sustainability framework, greenhouse gas emission reduction targets and new biodiversity protection standards . As of June 2024, Ian is a member of the advisory council for the German-Australia Chamber of Industry and Commerce (AHK Australien).

Forridel

Kemish is a co-founder and director of Forridel, a strategic advisory business which helps a range of private and public sector clients negotiate challenges in the international environment, with a particular focus on the Indo Pacific region.

Kemish is also actively engaged in the international development and not-for-profit sectors. Until 2024 Kemish was a senior adviser to the Global Partnership for Education, where he supported GPE's partnerships with Australia and the Pacific. He is the chair of both the Kokoda Track Foundation, which promotes health, livelihood, education and leadership in PNG, and 3rd Space, which provides services to the homeless in his home city of Brisbane.

Academia

Kemish is also involved with a number of Australian universities and research institutes. He is an adjunct professor in history at the University of Queensland, where he also chairs UQ's ChangeMakers alumni engagement initiative. He is a Distinguished Advisor at the Australian National University's National Security College, an Industry Fellow at the Griffith Asia Institute, and a director of the Australia-Indonesia Centre at Monash University. He was a visiting fellow at the Lowy Institute of International Affairs from 2016 until 2023.

Kemish writes regularly on Australian foreign policy and consular issues, with a particular focus on developments in the Indo-Pacific..

Awards and honours

Kemish was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia for his leading role in the Australian government's international task force that responded to the 2002 Bali bombings. [4] He was appointed Fellow of the Queensland Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2024.

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References

  1. "The Consul Book". University of Queensland . Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  2. "The Consul: An insider account from Australia's diplomatic frontline by Ian Kemish" . Retrieved 11 April 2024.
  3. Jackson, Keith (12 February 2013). "A tribute from 'PNG Attitude' to Ian Kemish AM". PNG Attitude. Retrieved 13 January 2021.
  4. 1 2 3 "Professor Ian Kemish AM, Chair". Alumni & Community. University of Queensland. 31 July 2020. Retrieved 13 January 2021.
  5. "Speakers". The Hamburg Summit – China meets Europe. Retrieved 13 January 2021.
  6. Radio National ABC Interview, 1 March 2013 reproduced at 2013 Valedictory interview: Ian Kemish bids PNG goodbye, archived from the original on 24 March 2013, retrieved 13 January 2021
  7. "How 9/11 attacks changed Australia's consular service". Australian Institute of International Affairs. Retrieved 27 May 2022.