W. D. Borrie Explained

W. D. Borrie
Birth Date:2 September 1913
Birth Place:Waimate, New Zealand
Workplaces:Australian National University
Thesis Title:The military defence of New Zealand, 1850-1914
Thesis Year:1936
Doctoral Students:Lloyd Robson
John Caldwell
Spouse:Alice Hazel Muller

Wilfred David "Mick" Borrie (2 September 1913 – 1 January 2000) was a New Zealand-born Australian demographer and academic.[1]

Education

Borrie was educated at Waitaki Boys' High School, Oamaru, completing his education at the University of Otago and University of Cambridge.[1] His Master's thesis The military defence of New Zealand, 1850–1914, was completed at Otago in 1936.[2] Borrie was president of the Otago University Students' Association in 1936.

Career

Borrie moved to Sydney in 1941 where he taught Social History at the University of Sydney until 1947.[1]

Borrie joined the Australian National University in 1948.[1] Borrie founded the Department of Demography in 1952, where from 1957 he was Professor of Demography and Chair of Demography, the first such worldwide. He retired in 1978.[1]

In 1961, Borrie delivered the third in the annual series of ABC lectures (renamed the Boyer Lectures) on "The Crowding World".

Borrie, keen to extend population studies throughout Australia, encouraged the formation of the Australian Population Association (APA) in 1980.[3] Borrie remained patron of the APA until he died.[1]

Personal

Borrie was born on 2 September 1913 at Waimate, New Zealand, the son of Peter William Borrie and Isabella Doig.[4] Borrie married Alice Hazel Muller in 1941, and had one daughter.[1] He died on 1 January 2000.

Honours and awards

Memorials and legacy

Borrie Prize

"The W.D. Borrie Prize is awarded to the best student paper on a population-related topic".[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Price . Charles A . Borrie, Wilfred David (Mick) (1913–2000) . Obituaries Australia . National Centre of Biography, Australian National University . 17 August 2021.
  2. Borrie . Wilfred . 1936 . Masters thesis . The military defence of New Zealand, 1850-1914 . OUR Archive, University of Otago . 10523/3247.
  3. Web site: Aims and Origins . Australian Population Association . 17 August 2021.
  4. Web site: McLintock . A. H. . Expatriates — Biographies Australia, Borrie, Wilfred David . An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand . Te Ara . 19 August 2021 . 1966.
  5. Web site: McDonald . Peter . Emeritus Professor Mick Borrie CBE . Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia . 27 August 2021 . 2000.
  6. Web site: OBE . Australian Honours . 17 August 2021.
  7. Web site: CBE . Australian Honours . 17 August 2021.
  8. Web site: Caldwell . Jack . John Caldwell (demographer). IUSSP Laureate 1996. W.D. (Mick) Borrie . International Union for the Scientific Study of Population . 19 August 2021.