Difference between revisions of "Ian Buist"

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[[File:Ian Buist.JPG|thumb|Ian Buist at the CHE AGM 2011]]'''Ian Buist''' (actually '''John Latto Farquharson Buist''', born 1930) is a gay rights campaigner and former diplomat. After achieving a first in classics at Oxford he joined the diplomatic service and worked in senior positions in Kenya and East Africa.
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[[File:Ian Buist.JPG|thumb|Ian Buist at the CHE AGM 2011]]'''Ian Buist''' (actually '''John Latto Farquharson Buist''', 1930–2012) was a gay rights campaigner and former diplomat. After achieving a first in classics at Oxford he joined the diplomatic service and worked in senior positions in Kenya and East Africa.
  
 
Buist joined [[CHE]] in 1972, rejecting GLF because 'The “GLF” idea of an anti-family, anti-Establishment social revolution seemed to me unlikely to produce change for the better.'<ref>http://www.chu.cam.ac.uk/archives/collections/BDOHP/Buist.pdf ''British Diplomatic Oral History Programme'', BUIST, John Latto Farquharson (Ian).</ref>
 
Buist joined [[CHE]] in 1972, rejecting GLF because 'The “GLF” idea of an anti-family, anti-Establishment social revolution seemed to me unlikely to produce change for the better.'<ref>http://www.chu.cam.ac.uk/archives/collections/BDOHP/Buist.pdf ''British Diplomatic Oral History Programme'', BUIST, John Latto Farquharson (Ian).</ref>
  
He has continued to contribute to the ongoing campaign for gay rights.
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He continued to contribute to the ongoing campaign for gay rights, up to his death on 19 October 2012.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 08:41, 30 October 2012

Ian Buist at the CHE AGM 2011
Ian Buist (actually John Latto Farquharson Buist, 1930–2012) was a gay rights campaigner and former diplomat. After achieving a first in classics at Oxford he joined the diplomatic service and worked in senior positions in Kenya and East Africa.

Buist joined CHE in 1972, rejecting GLF because 'The “GLF” idea of an anti-family, anti-Establishment social revolution seemed to me unlikely to produce change for the better.'[1]

He continued to contribute to the ongoing campaign for gay rights, up to his death on 19 October 2012.

References

  1. http://www.chu.cam.ac.uk/archives/collections/BDOHP/Buist.pdf British Diplomatic Oral History Programme, BUIST, John Latto Farquharson (Ian).