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John Barkham, a pioneering ecologist who helped establish the University of East Anglia’s School of Environmental Sciences, has died aged 82.
Barkham joined UEA in 1969 as its first ecologist and taught for more than three decades, known for experimenting with student-centred teaching influenced by the person‑centred psychologist Carl Rogers.
From 1996 he worked as an assessor for the Quality Assurance Agency.
Born in Taunton, Somerset, he took a first in geography at Birmingham University in 1963 and completed a doctorate on Cotswold beechwood flora.
He chaired the Norfolk Wildlife Trust (leading a modernisation of its name), served on Butterfly Conservation’s conservation committee, promoted a woodland co‑operative and helped create productive community allotments.
He moved to Devon in 1999, later returned to Norfolk in 2023, and endured Lewy body dementia and advanced prostate cancer in later years.
Barkham is survived by his partner, Barbara Rowland, two children and five grandchildren.
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Environment | The GuardianJohn Barkham obituary





















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