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Cary Fowler

Cary Fowler
Cary Fowler - Pop!Tech 2007.jpg
Fowler in 2007
Born Morgan Carrington Fowler, Jr.
1949 (age 67–68)
Memphis, Tennessee, U.S.
Alma mater Rhodes College, Simon Fraser University, Uppsala University
Known for Svalbard Global Seed Vault, Crop Trust
Notable awards Right Livelihood Award, Heinz Award, Vavilov Medal
Spouse Amy P. Goldman (m. 2012)
Website
www.caryfowler.com

Morgan Carrington Fowler, Jr. (born 1949), better known as Cary Fowler, is an American agriculturalist and the former executive director of the Crop Trust, currently serving as a Senior Advisor to the trust.

Fowler was born in 1949 to Morgan, a General Sessions judge, and Betty, a dietician. He graduated from White Station High School in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1967, and attended Rhodes College in Memphis, but transferred in his junior year to Simon Fraser University in Canada, earning his B.A. Honors degree in 1971. He received a Ph.D. degree in Sociology from Uppsala University in Sweden.

Fowler was active in civil rights demonstrations in Memphis. He was present at the Mason Temple on April 3, 1968, when Martin Luther King Jr. made his last speech, "I've Been to the Mountaintop". During the Vietnam War, he obtained conscientious objector status and worked at a hospital in North Carolina.

In the 1970s-80s Fowler was Program Director for the National Sharecroppers Fund/Rural Advancement Fund. Following this, he served as Professor and Director of Research in the Department for International Environment & Development Studies at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences in Ås, Norway. He also led the International Conference and Programme on Plant Genetic Resources at the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (UN) in the 1990s. There, he produced the UN's first global assessment of the state of the world's crop diversity and was the chief author of the Food and Agriculture Organization's Global Plan of Action for Plant Genetic Resources. He subsequently supervised the negotiations that led to its adoption by 150 countries in 1996.


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