The Lord Ouseley, who died 2 October, 2024, aged 79, was a life peer who ran public authorities, including local councils and was an adviser and reviewer of public services organisations.
Herman Ouseley had expertise in equality and diversity issues and was the Chairperson of several charitable organisations as well as being a Patron for dozens of organisations. He was at the forefront of challenging institutional racism in organisations and was an advocate on behalf of individuals from disadvantaged and deprived backgrounds. He sat in the House of Lords as a crossbencher from 2001 until his retirement in 2019. He was also included in the 2003 list of "100 Great Black Britons". The peer was a local government officer between 1963 and 1993. He was appointed as the first principal race relations advisor in local government. From 1981, he served as Principal Race Relations Adviser and head of the Greater London Council's Ethnic Minority Unit. He later became Chief Executive of the London Borough of Lambeth and the former Inner London Education Authority (the first black person to hold such an office), responsible for over 1000 schools and colleges across the capital. Ouseley was chair and chief executive in the Commission for Racial Equality from 1993 to 2000.
Herman George Ouseley was born 24 March, 1945. He was knighted in 1997, and raised to the peerage for life in 2001 as Baron Ouseley, of Peckham Rye, in the London Borough of Southwark.
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