Peter Davis | |||||||||||||||
Office: | Spouse of the Prime Minister of New Zealand | ||||||||||||||
Term Label: | In role | ||||||||||||||
Term Start: | 10 December 1999 | ||||||||||||||
Term End: | 19 November 2008 | ||||||||||||||
Primeminister: | Helen Clark | ||||||||||||||
Predecessor: | Burton Shipley | ||||||||||||||
Successor: | Bronagh Key | ||||||||||||||
Birth Name: | Peter Byard Davis | ||||||||||||||
Birth Date: | 25 April 1947 | ||||||||||||||
Birth Place: | Milford on Sea, Hampshire, England | ||||||||||||||
Nationality: | New Zealander | ||||||||||||||
Party: | Labour | ||||||||||||||
Module: |
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Peter Byard Davis (born 25 April 1947) is a New Zealand sociologist, professor, and the husband of Helen Clark, who was the Prime Minister of New Zealand from 1999 to 2008.
Davis was born in Milford on Sea, Hampshire, England, on 25 April 1947,[1] and spent his childhood in Tanzania, where his father worked for a mining company.[2] His father was born in China and his mother in India, but a great-great-grandfather had grown up in New Zealand. Davis gained a master's degree in sociology and statistics at the London School of Economics. He moved to New Zealand in 1970 to work at the University of Canterbury and completed a PhD at the University of Auckland.[2] He became a naturalised New Zealander in 1972.[1] He was part of a team investigating oral health in New Zealand and was joint editor of the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology. In 1976 he was appointed a lecturer at the University of Auckland school of medicine.[3]
In 1980 he stood unsuccessfully for the Auckland City Council on a Labour Party ticket.[4] In 1988 he was elected to the Auckland Regional Authority for the Mount Albert ward.[5]
Davis met Clark, then a political-science lecturer at Auckland, in 1977[6] and they married in 1981.[7]
Davis specialises in medical sociology, and from 2004 to 2017 worked as the Director of the COMPASS (Centre of Methods and Policy Application in the Social Sciences) Research Centre at the University of Auckland. In 2014 he was awarded a James Cook Research Fellowship for a research project titled "New Zealand as a 'social laboratory'".[8] He is now Professor Emeritus in the School of Population Health and Honorary Professor in the Department of Statistics at the University of Auckland.[9] Previously he served as Professor of Public Health at the University of Otago's Christchurch School of Medicine.
He has previously served on the Auckland Area Health Board, and was a representative in 1989 when his wife (Health Minister at the time) suspended that body. Davis has achieved international recognition in his field, having worked as a consultant for the World Health Organization.[10]
In 2019 Davis became a City Vision candidate for the Auckland District Health Board and was subsequently elected.[11]
He is Chair of The Helen Clark Foundation board.[12] [13]