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Lord Alderdice appointed Honorary Professor of Practice at the Mitchell Institute

Lord John Alderdice has been appointed as Honorary Professor of Practice to the Senator George J. Mitchell Institute for Global Peace, Security and Justice at Queen's.

Lanyon 20.07.2018 from a distance
Lord John Alderdice.

Queen's awards Honorary titles to recognise and reward the contribution of people of distinction to teaching, research and input through professional standing.

Commenting on his appointment, Lord Alderdice said: “I am delighted to continue my long association with Queen’s through this appointment and to connect my academic activities in Oxford and elsewhere with the work of the Mitchell Institute.  I greatly value the opportunity to give something back to my ‘alma mater’ through depositing my political and psychological papers in the marvellous McClay Library and joining the staff of the Mitchell Institute, which is making such an international name for itself through its research and teaching in international conflict.”

Mitchell Institute Director Professor Richard English commented: “We're delighted that Lord Alderdice is joining the Institute as an Honorary Professor of Practice. His wisdom, experience and insights will be invaluable for students, staff and the wider community, and we all look forward very much to working with him in his new role.”

Lord Alderdice trained in medicine, psychiatry and psychoanalysis and applied his skills in teaching and clinical work at the Centre for Psychotherapy that he established in Belfast, but also took these understandings into politics to address the long-standing political violence in Northern Ireland.

From 1987 to 1998, he was the Leader of Northern Ireland's Alliance Party and one of the negotiators of the 1998 Belfast/Good Friday Agreement. He then became the first Speaker of the new Northern Ireland Assembly, serving until 2004 when he was appointed one of the four members of the Independent Monitoring Commission (IMC), charged by the British and Irish Governments with overseeing security normalisation in Ireland. In 2015 - after the ‘Fresh Start Agreement’ – he was appointed by the First and Deputy First Ministers of Northern Ireland to a three-person panel charged with reporting on a strategy for disbanding paramilitary groups in Northern Ireland. This report was completed and published in June 2016.

Image of Lord Alderdice

Since 1996 Lord Alderdice has been an active Liberal Democrat. He is a member of the House of Lords and was Convenor/Chair of the Liberal Democrats in the House of Lords from 2010 to 2014 during the Conservative/Liberal Coalition. In 2020-2021 he was a Deputy to the Lord Speaker, and also a member of the COVID-19 Select Committee of the House. He is currently a member of the House of Lords Select Committee on International Relations and Defence, and in 2025 he was appointed the UK Trade Envoy to Azerbaijan and Central Asia.

From 2005 to 2009 he was the President of Liberal International, the global family of some 100 liberal political parties.  In 2015 he was awarded the Liberal International Prize for Freedom and also was also elected Presidente d’Honneur of Liberal International – a life-time honorific position reserved for some former Presidents. In 2025 he was elected President of the National Liberal Club in London.

He has continued to work on conflict issues with various academic positions at the University of Oxford and is also a Professor of Practice at the Global Humanity for Peace Institute of the University of Wales Trinity Saint David. He has been recognised with many international prizes, honorary doctorates, and fellowships for his academic and practical contributions.  Lord Alderdice is the Founding Chairman of The Concord Foundation.

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Media enquiries to Zara McBrearty on email: z.mcbrearty@qub.ac.uk 

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