VC’s Inaugural Lecture: Professor Muthama Muasya

26 May 2021 | Director Nico Badenhuizen. Videography Microsoft Teams Webinar. Video edit Nico Badenhuizen. Photo Supplied.

Professor Muthama Muasya, an internationally recognised plant taxonomist and evolutionary biologist, delivered the Vice-Chancellor’s Inaugural Lecture on Wednesday, 26 May 2021 at the University of Cape Town (UCT).

Muasya’s lecture, titled “Biodiversity studies in the Anthropocene: from species discovery in fragmented landscapes to unravelling the origin of iconic African flora”, focused on species discovered in the Cape flora and highlighted the evolution of the savanna – the cradle of humankind – and other iconic African flora.

 


Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Please view the republishing articles page for more information.


The UCT Inaugural Lecture Series

 

Inaugural lectures are a central part of university academic life. These events are held to commemorate the inaugural lecturer’s appointment to full professorship. They provide a platform for the academic to present the body of research that they have been focusing on during their career, while also giving UCT the opportunity to showcase its academics and share its research with members of the wider university community and the general public in an accessible way.

In April 2023, Interim Vice-Chancellor Emeritus Professor Daya Reddy announced that the Vice-Chancellor’s Inaugural Lecture Series would be held in abeyance in the coming months, to accommodate a resumption of inaugural lectures under a reconfigured UCT Inaugural Lecture Series – where the UCT extended executive has resolved that for the foreseeable future, all inaugural lectures will be resumed at faculty level.

Recent executive communications

 

2025

 

 

2024

 

 

2023

 

 

2022

 

 

2021

 

 

2020

 

 

2019

 

 

2018

 

 

2017

 

 

2016 and 2015

 

No inaugural lectures took place during 2015 and 2016.

 
TOP