James Ingram was executive director of the
World Food Programme, a major operational program of the United Nations system, from 1982 to 1992. He held the personal rank of
UN Under Secretary General. He is the only Australian to have headed such a UN organisation. Before that appointment, Ingram was the chief executive officer of the Australian Development Assistance Bureau (ADAB), the second of several names applied over the years to the organisation managing
Australia's international development assistance programs. Ingram's career with the
Department of External Affairs (as it was then known as) began in 1946 with his selection as a diplomatic cadet on the basis of competitive public written and oral examinations. He was the youngest appointed under the cadetship scheme. His first diplomatic appointment was to
Tel Aviv (1950–53) following his marriage. Subsequent postings were to
Washington DC (1956–59);
Brussels (1959-60), where he was
Charge d’affaires responsible for opening Australia's Mission to the then
European Economic Community and Embassy to Belgium;
Jakarta (1962–64); and the Australian Mission to the United Nations New York (1964–66). On return to Canberra, Ingram was Assistant Secretary in the Department of Foreign Affairs responsible for East and South Asia, the Americas, the South Pacific, and Asia and Pacific Council (ASPAC) affairs. In 1970, Ingram was appointed Australian Ambassador to the Philippines and in 1973 Australian High Commissioner to Canada and concurrently non-resident High Commissioner in the then-newly independent Caribbean nations of
Jamaica,
Barbados,
Guyana and the
Bahamas, and Australian representative on the newly established, now defunct, International Bauxite Association. ==CEO of Australian aid program==