After a pause due to the COVID-19 pandemic, honorary degree ceremonies are returning to University of Leeds to celebrate the success of key figures in the worlds of law, art, science and more.
Alongside undergraduates receiving their degrees during graduation fortnight, starting on Monday 11 July, eight individuals will be honoured with one of higher education’s most prestigious awards, in the University’s Great Hall.
This year’s honorary graduands are:
Nina Gualinga, Doctor of Laws
Nina Gualinga is a 29-year old international advocate for the rights of women, Indigenous peoples and climate justice. She is Kichwa from the Sarayaku community in the Ecuadorian Amazon.
Nina has been involved in local, national and international efforts to raise awareness and address the injustices occurring in the Amazon, particularly related to extractive industries and climate change.
She is a spokeswoman for Mujeres Amazónicas, a collective of Indigenous women in the Ecuadorian Amazon defending their lives and lands, and fighting against systematic violence against Indigenous women. She is also the Women Defenders Program Coordinator at Amazon Watch.
Mark Tucker, Doctor of Laws
Since graduating in Textile Management at Leeds, Mark Tucker has enjoyed distinguished careers in insurance and the financial sector. After various senior management positions with Prudential plc, he was appointed President and Group CEO of AIA Group Limited in Hong Kong, where he won a lifetime achievement award for his role in revolutionising the life insurance and asset management industries in Asia.
Mark served on the Court of the Bank of England from 2009 to 2012, where he was a member of both its Financial Stability and Audit and Risk Committes in the aftermath of the worst financial crisis in a generation. He is now Group Chairman of HSBC Holdings plc.
Brenda Hale, Doctor of Laws
Lady Hale is the former President of the UK’s Supreme Court, the only woman to have held that position. She was the first woman and youngest person to be appointed a Law Commissioner, and as a judge has played a major role in overhauling laws relating to children, domestic violence, mental health and, recently, the fundamental principles of constitutional law.
Lady Hale has been a consistent and determined advocate for diversity, equal opportunity and access for all, and a champion of the rights of women, showing a deep humanity alongside her formidable intellect, integrity and courage.
Lady Hale was also welcomed to the University’s Great Hall in 2019, when she gave the Alice Bacon public lecture - a series honouring the pioneering Yorkshire MP's achievements.
David Gray, Doctor of Laws
David Gray worked as a partner for Hepworth and Chadwick in Leeds between 1982 and 2000 (renamed Eversheds in 1997). He took on a full-time management role as Managing Partner for Eversheds North in 2000 and in 2003 was appointed Managing Partner and Chief Executive for Eversheds.
David became Pro-Chancellor and Chair of Council – the University’s governing body – on 1 August 2013, a role from which he will step down this summer.
Eleanor Dodson, Doctor of Science
Eleanor Dodson FRS is a computational biologist specialising in the investigation of protein structures using X-ray crystallography, and an Emeritus Professor at the University of York. A highly skilled mathematician, she realised that only through computational techniques could we routinely crack complex mathematical problems.
Ahead of her time, Eleanor was instrumental in the development of standardising computational analyses methods into a programming suite (Collaborative Computing Project Number 4), which is still used by structural biologists across the world.
Alison Lowe, Doctor of Laws
A Leeds alumna, Alison Lowe OBE recently stepped down after a 29-year tenure as Labour councillor for Armley – a seat she took up at the age of 25 as the first black female councillor in Leeds City Council. She is the former CEO of Touchstone, undertaking vital advocacy work for individuals and communities.
Alison’s personal commitment to speaking up for the marginalised and to promoting the importance of frank and open discussion about mental health extends into her professional commitments. Under her stewardship Touchstone has been awarded numerous accolades for inclusivity in the workplace. Ms Lowe is currently West Yorkshire’s Deputy Mayor for Policing and Crime.
Rachel Skinner, Doctor of Laws
Having completed a postgraduate MSc (Eng) degree in Transport Planning and Engineering at Leeds, Rachel Skinner CBE is now Executive Director at WSP, where she leads on ESG & Government Relations, having previously led its transport business. In 2020-21, she served as the 156th President of the Institution of Civil Engineers and she is a Patron of Women in Transport (a not-for-profit), having been one of its founding board members since 2005.
Rachel chairs the Carbon stream of the Infrastructure Client Group and served two years as an Infrastructure Commissioner for Scotland from late 2018. She was awarded a CBE for services to infrastructure in the 2022 New Year Honours list and is a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering.
Gillian Leng, Doctor of Science
Former Chief Executive and Director of Health and Social Care at the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), Gillian Leng CBE graduated from Leeds with a degree in Medicine in 1987. Throughout an illustrious career she has displayed a continuous commitment to effective patient-focused services and quality improvement.
Gillian has played key roles in establishing the Cochrane Collaboration, designed to organise medical research to facilitate evidence-based choices about health interventions, and her career has covered a breadth of sectors including wider public health, healthcare, education and social care.
Further information
Read about previous honorary graduates at the University of Leeds.
Further information about this year’s graduation ceremonies.