Paul Ramadge

Summary

Paul Andrew Godwin Ramadge (born 6 June 1958) is an Australian journalist who was the Editor-in-chief of The Age, a daily newspaper in Melbourne, Australia (2008–2012).[1] He was appointed a Vice-Chancellor’s Professorial Fellow along Ed Byrne at Monash University in 2013. He also became the inaugural Director of the Australia-Indonesia Centre (2013–2016) while the board was chaired by Harold Mitchell.

Career and journalism edit

While working at The Age, Ramadge reinforced investigative journalism as well as the coverage of Victoria. He was praised for his contributions to the newspaper following the award as 'PANPA Newspaper of the Year' in 2012, when he left.

Ramadge announced on 25 June, 2012, that he was stepping down along Amanda Wilson and Peter Fray of Sydney Morning Herald.

PLuS Alliance edit

In 2017, Ramadge was appointed Managing Director of The PLuS Alliance, a collaboration between King's College London, Arizona State University and UNSW Sydney. He served as business advisor for the International & Alliances Practice Lead at Wells Advisory, which has teams in Australia and the UK, heading The Dolphin Research Institute, an environmental organisation in Victoria as well as a board member of Mental Health Victoria.

References edit

  1. ^ "The Age editor Paul Ramadge quits Fairfax". The Age. 25 June 2012. Archived from the original on 24 September 2021.