At Carleton University, where he began his career, he held a series of academic and administrative posts, including chairman of the English department, dean of the faculty of arts, vice-president (academic) and interim president for the first five months of 1979.
From 1980 to 1990 he was President of the University of New Brunswick. During that period he also served terms as president of the Canadian Bureau for International Education, chairman of the Association of Atlantic Universities and chairman of the Corporate-Higher Education Forum.
From 1990 to 1993 he was special advisor to the Premier of New Brunswick and co-chairman of the New Brunswick Commission on Excellence in Education, which published two reports that guided educational reform in that province.[1][2]
His publications include The Eighteenth Century Pulpit (Oxford University Press, 1969), Fearful Joy (McGill-Queens University Press, 1973), Schools For A New Century and To Live and Learn (reports of the New Brunswick Commission on Excellence in Education, 1992, 1993), Innovation: Essays by Leading Canadian Researchers, edited with Lois Claxton (Key Porter Books, 2002), and Lord Beaverbrook and the Kennedys (University of New Brunswick, 2012).
Among his awards are honorary degrees from six Canadian and two American universities. In 2000 he was the recipient of the Association of Commonwealth Universities of the Symons Medal for outstanding service to higher education in the Commonwealth, and in 2003 he received the David C. Smith Award from the Council of Ontario Universities for his contributions to universities and public policy in Canada.
Jim met Laura Parsons at university and the couple married in 1964. The couple would go on to have two children, Sarah and Geoffrey.
In an interview with The Record Valerie Hill writes: "He had a tremendous impact on Sarah growing up, his daughter said. But that influence wasn’t just about encouraging his children to achieve academically or professionally. Most of all, he wanted his kids to be good people. She remembered when her father was looking over the tax return from her first job. He wasn’t interested in how much she earned but rather how much she donated to charity.“You need to give money,” she recalls him saying."[3]