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Caroline Ann CoxFormer Deputy Speaker of the British House of Lords, sociologist and human rights activist
Date of Birth: 06.07.1937
Country: Great Britain |
Biography of Baroness Caroline Cox
Baroness Caroline Cox of Queensbury is a former Deputy Speaker of the British House of Lords, a sociologist, and a renowned human rights advocate. She is a member and leader of several human rights organizations, including the Advisory Councils of the Andrei Sakharov Foundation and MigrationWatch, as well as the Honorary Vice-Chair of the International Islamic-Christian Organization for Reconciliation and Reconstruction.
Caroline Cox was born in Hartford, England, and is the daughter of a surgeon. She began her career as a nurse at the London Hospital in 1958. In 1967, Cox graduated from the University of London with honors, earning a degree in sociology. She later obtained a specialist degree in economics.
From 1974, Cox served as the head of the Sociology Department at the North London Polytechnic, where she also taught and held high positions in various educational institutions in London. She is the author of several books on sociology and political research.
Cox has been a member of the House of Lords since 1982 and served as the Deputy Speaker of the House of Lords of the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland from 1986. Since 1992, she has been the Chair of the Armenian-British Parliamentary Group. Cox holds socialist and Christian beliefs.
In addition to her political and academic career, Baroness Cox has made significant contributions to the protection of the Armenian population in Karabakh. She has made over 60 humanitarian trips to provide essential medication to the residents. In 2006, she was awarded the Mkhitar Gosh Medal of the Republic of Armenia for her outstanding state and socio-political activities, as well as her significant contributions to diplomacy, jurisprudence, and politics.
Congressman Frank Pallone referred to her as a "true Armenian nationalist willing to give her life for Armenia and Karabakh." Thomas de Waal, in describing Caroline Cox's involvement in the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict, called her a "passionate advocate for the Armenians of Karabakh."

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