Twenty-two-year-old Aundrene Cameron has been named Jamaica's 2025 Rhodes Scholar.
The 2023 Miss Jamaica Festival Queen was among six female and four male candidates who vied for the prestigious scholarship this year. The announcement was made on Thursday, during a brief ceremony at King's House, by CEO of the Port Authority of Jamaica and Chairman of the Police Service Commission, Professor Gordon Shirley, who deputised for Governor-General, Sir Patrick Allen, as Rhodes Scholarship Selection Committee Chair this year.
A former student of Campion College and Ardenne High School, The University of the West Indies, Mona, graduate is bound for the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom, where she will pursue a Master of Science degree in criminology and criminal justice, and a Master of Philosophy degree in law, with a specific focus on human trafficking. Cameron currently holds a Bachelor of Laws degree with first class honours and is in her second year of study at the Norman Manley Law School.
"I am trying to convince myself that this is real. It is such a beautiful moment. This gives me such an amazing opportunity, and I am just in awe. I am just so ready to be able to bring my contribution to Jamaica to the next level," she said, moments after the announcement.
Professor Shirley said that it was a difficult decision to make, "because we had 10 really very brilliant candidates and it took a lot of deliberation to get there".
Secretary of the Selection Committee, Mariame McIntosh Robinson, said the members were "very pleased" with the quality and variety of the finalists' pursuits.
"We had 10 finalists who span the arts, humanities, science and engineering. We would like to just thank them for continuing to inspire us. There can only be one Rhodes Scholar, but we will stay in touch with our finalists," she said.
Based at the University of Oxford since 1903, the Rhodes Scholarship is the world's pre-eminent and oldest graduate fellowship. It has been awarded to one outstanding applicant from Jamaica every year since 1904.