Tag Archives: Birkbeck bicentenary

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Chris Giles, Financial Times economics commentator

Chris Giles is the FT’s economics commentator. He writes a fortnightly column and the weekly newsletter, Chris Giles on Central Banks with a focus on trends in the world economy and in the UK.  Previously, he was economics editor and served as a leader writer.

He won the prestigious Wincott Award for journalism in 2014 and the British Journalism Award’s business journalist of the year prize in the 2012. He has also won the Royal Statistical Society prize for excellence in journalism in both 2008 and 2012.

Before joining the FT in 2000, Chris was an economics correspondent at the BBC. He started his career in research, spending seven years as an economist for the Institute for Fiscal Studies.

Chris is a Birkbeck alumnus, having completed his MSc Economics in 1994.

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Chris Corbin, Co-founder of Corbin & King restaurants

Chris is a restaurateur, Chair of Leukaemia UK and co-founder of the event, Who’s cooking dinner? which brings together the hospitality community and raises vital funds to stop leukaemia devastating lives.

Along with partner Jeremy King, Chris restored and renovated the grade II listed building situated next to the Ritz Hotel in Piccadilly, transforming it into one of London’s most iconic and upscale restaurants, the Wolseley- which he credits as one of his greatest achievements. For forty years, the duo have transformed other well-known restaurants, including The Ivy and Le Caprice into hugely in-demand eateries.

Chris studied for a Certificate of Higher Education in History of Art at Birkbeck in 2010 and speaks of restaurants as vehicles of self-expression: “There’s a certain art in what we do as restaurateurs…Artwork in a restaurant really feeds a person’s senses and contributes to the experience.”

200th Aniversary Birkbeck Effect: Charles Wesley Hume, Founder of UoL Animal Welfare Society (ULAWS)

Charles Wesley Hume was elected President of the Birkbeck Student Union in 1913. He began his campaign by calling out proposed regressive changes to the College governing Committee and promoting a change of constitution of Birkbeck as a university rather than a college.

After graduating, he joined the College’s maths department. He also founded the University of London Animal Welfare Society, which held its first meeting in 1926 and took an unsentimental approach to animal wellbeing, accepting veterinarians and animal experimenters into the fold. While this was quite controversial at the time, he advocated the fair treatment of animals in a way that was “dealt with objectively and not sentimentally.”

He later, in 1962-63, gave evidence to the Home Office’s Departmental Committee on Experiments on Animals, which informed the updated Cruelty to Animals Act.

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Cecil Terence Ingold, Mycologist

Ingold was one of the most influential mycologists of the twentieth century and president of the British Mycological Society where he organized the first international congress of mycologists. Born in Blackrock, Dublin, Cecil Terence Ingold was awarded a first-class honours in Botany from Queen’s University Belfast in 1926.

In 1944 he was appointed to probably the foremost chair in the UK in the field of mycology at Birkbeck. The Department of Botany had been led to prominence since 1909 by Dame Helen Gwynne-Vaughan, pioneer in fungal genetics, who was made Professor in 1921.

At Birkbeck, Ingold continued to take a major role in the undergraduate teaching and was joined in 1946 by his wartime Leicester student Bryan Plunkett as lecturer, who remained with him permanently thereafter.

Ingold retired from post at Birkbeck in 1972 and is best remembered for his discovery of an entirely new group of fungi – the aquatic hyphomycetes – of which more than 300 species are now recognized.

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Caroline McDonald, Director of Access and Engagement

Caroline has dedicated her career to opening up access to higher education for people who have traditionally not been able to access university. She is a championing voice for tackling injustices that have attempted to prevent the communities Birkbeck serves from fully participating in and reaching their academic potential.

Caroline is the first Director of Access and Engagement at Birkbeck, a department that is truly committed to supporting and honoring Birkbeck’s founding principles. She is an advocate for mature learners within our community at Birkbeck and continuously supports initiatives to bring it to national attention, amongst HEI’s and governing bodies.

Caroline lends her time and expertise to a range of committees and departments at Birkbeck, to support initiatives from the Race Equality Charter, Birkbeck’s work with Trades Unions, to the Sanctuary initiative.

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Caroline Edwards, Lecturer in English and co-founder of Open Library of Humanities

Caroline is a Senior Lecturer in Modern and Contemporary Literature and a co-founder of the award-winning open access journals publishing platform Open Library of Humanities with Professor Martin Eve, which officially launched in September 2015 with a $741,000 3-year grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

She is known for her advocacy in open access publishing. She is also a Founding and Commissioning Editor of the open access journal of 21st-century literary criticism, Alluvium.

Her research focuses on the utopian imagination in contemporary literature, science fiction, apocalyptic narratives, and Western Marxism.

She joined Birkbeck in September 2013 and was made a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (HEA) in 2016. Caroline was also elected as Secretary of the British Association for Contemporary Literary Studies.

20th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Camilla Simpson, CEO of Zehna Therapeutics

The biotech company Camilla Simpson leads, Zehna Therapeutics, is at the early stages of research into the links between the microbiome and heart and kidney disease. She says, “When the clinic was researching cardiovascular disease, they found that a microbial metabolite was present in many cases of these diseases. As such, we are now targeting the pathway that produces the metabolite so we can shut it down and therefore potentially prevent the progression of cardiovascular diseases and chronic kidney disease.”

Coming from a medical family, Camilla has striven to make people’s lives better through furthering medical research. She graduated with a Master’s in Analytical Chemistry in 1994, having already completed two undergraduate degrees in science and chemistry. Her Birkbeck studies gave her the confidence she needed in public speaking to really create a platform for women in science, technology and mathematics.

Now living in the United States, Camilla advises or sits on the board of multiple biomedical research companies.

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Brooke Johnson, Geology student

Having struggled with undiagnosed dyslexia, dyspraxia and discalculia all his life and leaving school without full qualifications, Brooke Johnson applied to Birkbeck’s part-time BSc in Geology to pursue his ambition after disheartening experiences working in a call centre.

Brooke, a working-class student from Newcastle, excelled at Birkbeck once he got the diagnosis and support he needed, graduating with first class honours in 2015.

Since then, he has gone on to post-doctoral study and tutoring in earth sciences at the University of Oxford and has volunteered extensively with widening access programmes to help other working-class students develop a passion for geology and get into higher education.

He is now a sedimentary geology researcher at the University of Liège, Belgium.

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Brian Harwood, Academic registrar and founder of Birkbeck’s disability service

Academic Registrar at Birkbeck for 30 years, Brian Harwood retired in 2008 and was then elected as a Fellow. He notably recalled the challenge of fighting government funding cuts through the 1980s, a situation that recurred more than once during his tenure.

Brian said that what made him stay so long at Birkbeck was recognising the value of adult education on students: “They were admirable – they were mature, the great majority of Birkbeck’s students had jobs, they did not have time to waste and they were business-like and courteous.”

During his time, the student body increased threefold. He established Birkbeck’s disability service, a vital department supporting students with disabilities, both visible and invisible and ensuring they were able to study without hindrance. The disability service continues to provide ongoing student support today

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effect: Betty Lockwood, Labour politician, gender equality campaigner and President of Birkbeck 1983-89

A lifelong equalities campaigner and former President of Birkbeck, Baroness Betty Lockwood was born in West Yorkshire in 1924. Her early educational experiences prepared her well for the presidency of Birkbeck, which she held from 1983-1989.

After studying at Eastborough Girls School, she continued her studies at night school. Then, with the support of a Mary Macarthur scholarship for working women, she read economics and politics at Ruskin College, Oxford.

In 1978, she was made a life peer. Her parliamentary roles included Chair of the Equal Opportunities Commission from 1975-83 and deputy Speaker of the House of Lords from 1990-2007.