Lynch, John, 1943-

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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Lynch, John, 1943-
Other forms of name
Lynch, John (John Dominic)
Lynch, J. D. (John Dominic)
Date of birth
1943
Date of death
2020-04-12
Associated country
Great Britain
Field of activity
Fiction
Selling
Occupation
Novelists
Sales executives
Associated Language
eng
Gender
male
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 316029577
Wikidata: Q143180
Library of congress: nb2019003567
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Wikipedia description:

John Dominic Lynch (8 July 1946 – 25 May 2021) was an Australian-Vanuatuan linguist who specialised in the historical development of the Oceanic languages. He was a professor at the University of Papua New Guinea for over twenty years and elected its vice chancellor in 1986 before finishing his career at the University of the South Pacific in Port Vila, Vanuatu. Retiring at the end of 2007, he was made professor emeritus of his named chair in Pacific languages in a rare honour bestowed by the university. While at the University of the South Pacific, Lynch served as the director of the Pacific Languages Unit, an association dedicated to the research and promotion of languages in the Pacific. He also served as chief editor of Oceanic Linguistics for twelve years following the resignation of Byron Bender. Lynch was born in Sydney to an Irish Catholic family. He attended the University of Sydney on a Commonwealth Scholarship, originally majoring in anthropology but later joining the honours linguistics program as well, studying under the Aboriginal language expert Arthur Capell. After receiving a grant from the East–West Center, Lynch earned his doctorate from the University of Hawaiʻi under the tutelage of George W. Grace after conducting fieldwork on the Lenakel language of Tanna in southern Vanuatu. Throughout his career, he was known as a gifted writer and administrator. His work in education earned him several honours, including Vanuatu's Independence Anniversary Medal and Papua New Guinea's Anniversary Medal. Following his retirement, he was made a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities.

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