A HUMAN rights campaigner and Scots professor emeritus has won a prestigious award for his dedication to Scotland’s capital city.
Sir Geoff Palmer, chancellor of Heriot-Watt University, was presented with the Edinburgh Award 2022 in a ceremony at City Chambers on Monday.
The annual prize honours an outstanding individual who has made a positive impact on the city, boosting its national and international recognition.
Surrounded by family, friends and invited guests, Palmer received an engraved loving cup from Lord Provost Robert Aldridge and was reunited with a set of his handprints preserved in stone in the City Chambers quadrangle.
The award celebrates Palmer's contributions to academia, and his tireless defence of human rights in the city and beyond.
Speaking at the event, he said: “This award is more than a great honour, it is a recognition of all the people whose goodness has contributed to my life and work.
“I arrived in Edinburgh as a research student in 1964 and I thank the City of Edinburgh Council for all it has done for the community.”
Palmer is the 16th person to receive the award, after the likes of author Fergus Linehan last year and fellow academics Professor Peter Higgs (2011) and Sir Timothy O’Shea (2017).
As part of the ceremony, Hannah Lavery, the Edinburgh Makar, recited a poem in Palmer's honour.
Edinburgh’s Lord Provost Robert Aldridge said: “It’s an honour and a pleasure to present one of the capital’s most prestigious accolades, the Edinburgh Award, to Sir Geoff Palmer.
“In a career spanning over 50 years, Sir Geoff has done much to promote Edinburgh to the world, celebrating the positive impact that higher education has on this city. His dedication and passion for the sciences, activism and for our city as a whole – its people, its legacy and its future – is an inspiration to us all.
“I am delighted that the people of Edinburgh have acknowledged his contributions and have chosen Sir Geoff to receive the Edinburgh Award 2022, an honour which he truly deserves.
“Sir Geoff has contributed substantially to the betterment of this great city, and I am confident that his legacy both in academia and activism will live on for many years to come and his handprints immortalised in stone on our very own Edinburgh Award walk of fame."
Sir Geoff first arrived in the Scottish capital in 1964 to pursue a PhD in grain science and technology jointly with the then Heriot-Watt College and the University of Edinburgh.
On completing his doctorate in 1967 he began working at the Brewing Research Foundation where he developed the industrial process of barley abrasion and pioneered the use of the scanning electron microscope to study cereal grains.
In 1977, he returned to Heriot-Watt University as a staff member and gained a DSc degree for his research work in 1985.
In 1989 he became the first black professor in Scotland and remained in Edinburgh until his retirement in 2005.
He was knighted in the 2014 New Year Honours for services to human rights, science and charity, and four years later he was appointed Jamaica’s first Honorary Consul in Scotland and also received Jamaican national honour the Order of Distinction (Commander Class) in 2020.
Between December 2020 and June 2022, Palmer chaired the independent Edinburgh Slavery and Colonialism Legacy Review Group whose work has been vital in profiling the capital’s historic links with slavery and colonialism in the public realm.
The findings and recommendations of the group were endorsed unanimously by councillors on August 30 and the actions they suggest will form the basis of the council’s continued response to the issues.
Last year, Palmer was appointed chancellor of Heriot-Watt University.
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