University of Melbourne’s vice chancellor dies at 52

University of Melbourne’s vice chancellor dies at 52

Johnston was made an officer of the Order of Australia in 2018 for her services to higher education, particularly to marine ecology, eco-toxicology and research institutes. In 2022, she was elected a fellow of the Australian Academy of Science.

University of Melbourne VC Emma Johnston has died from cancer.Credit: Peter Casamento/Casamento Photography

University of Melbourne Chancellor Jane Hansen said Johnston had an “unwavering commitment” to students, whether it be through tackling cost-of-living pressures, scholarships, teaching, or supporting their research.

“She did everything she could to ensure they were best equipped to achieve their goals. Most of all, she just liked spending time with them to hear their stories. They were her inspiration,” Hansen said.

She also promoted the capacity of women and girls to study science, “helping us to better understand and protect our marine communities and coastal waterways”.

The Group of Eight universities called her death an “unfathomable loss for Australia’s higher education and research community”.

Go8 Chief Executive Vicki Thomson said they had lost a remarkable leader and friend.

“Emma was simply amazing – brilliant in her science, principled in her leadership, and unfailingly generous as a colleague and mentor. Our heartfelt grief is shared across the nation’s universities and beyond. ”

In a written obituary, Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering CEO Kylie Walker and UNSW Professor Rob Brooks said that “Emma wanted nothing less than to save the world – but like the ocean – in the end she could only do so much”.

“Emma’s final months were marked by a fierce doubling-down on this mission – she understood that she was running out of time. Only 52 years old when she left us after a brief and brutal illness, she still wasn’t done with parenting, with saving the oceans and the planet, with nurturing and uplifting the next generation, or with remaking the Australian research and higher education landscape into something magnificent,” they wrote.

“She truly was a leader for our age.”

Professor Michael Wesley will continue in the role of acting vice chancellor.

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