- Stephen Law
Stephen Law is a philosopher who teaches at Heythrop College in the University of London. He also edits the journal "THINK", a source of philosophy aimed at the general public, affiliated with The Royal Institute of Philosophy. Law currently lives in Oxford, England, with his wife and daughter.
- Bill Durodié
Bill Durodié is Senior Lecturer in Risk and Corporate Security at the Defence College of Management and Technology, Cranfield University, part of the Defence Academy of the United Kingdom. He was previously Director of the International Centre for Security Analysis, and Senior Research Fellow in the International Policy Institute, within the War Studies Group of King's College London.
- Gwynne Dyer
Gwynne Dyer, Ph.D, MA, BA (born April 17, 1943) is a London-based independent Canadian journalist, syndicated columnist and military historian. He was born in St. John's, Newfoundland and joined the Royal Canadian Naval Reserve at the age of sixteen. While still in the naval reserve, he obtained a BA in History from Memorial University of Newfoundland in 1963; an MA in Military History from Rice University, Houston, Texas, …
- Richard Hoggart
Richard Hoggart (born September 24, 1918) is a British academic and public figure, whose career has covered the fields of sociology, English literature and cultural studies, with a special concern for British popular culture. He is widely known for his 1957 book "The Uses of Literacy". This book was differently interpreted as lamenting the loss of an authentic popular culture and as denouncing the imposition of mass culture by the culture industries.
- John Harvey-Jones
Sir John Harvey-Jones, MBE, was chairman of ICI from 1982 to 1987. He is probably best known for his BBC television show "Troubleshooter", in which he advised struggling businesses. He is a strong supporter of Wienerite principles. Sir John Harvey-Jones was born on April 16 1924 to experience a childhood of extremes.
- Elizabeth Grosz
Elizabeth A. Grosz is a feminist academic living and working in the USA. She is known for philosophical interpretations of the work of French philosophers Jacques Lacan, Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault and Gilles Deleuze, as well as her readings of the works of French feminists, Luce Irigaray, Julia Kristeva and Michele Le Doeuff. She has mainly written on questions of corporeality and their relations to the sciences and the arts.
- Adam Joinson
Adam Joinson ("b." 1970) is a senior lecturer in Information Systems at the School of Management, University of Bath in the United Kingdom. He is best known for his research on psychological aspects of Internet use, including computer-mediated communication, self-disclosure online and the use of new technology in research. More recently his research has focussed on privacy and the Internet.
- Andrew Ashworth
Andrew Ashworth is the Vinerian Professor of English Law at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of All Souls College. He is one of the UK's leading criminologists and has authored many prominent texts on the subject. Ashworth was born in 1947 in Rochdale. He graduated from the London School of Economics with a degree in law and then went to Oxford to complete a BCL degree. He is married to his second wife Veronica, …
- Ian Hassall
Ian Hassall is a New Zealand paediatrician and children's advocate. He was New Zealand's first Commissioner for Children from 1989 to 1994. His career has entailed working for children and their families as clinician, strategist, researcher and advocate. Since 2002 he has been Senior Researcher at the Institute of Public Policy (IPP) at AUT University in Auckland. With Emma Davies and Kirsten Hanna he undertakes research and advocates for attitudes, …
- Stuart Cameron
Stuart Cameron is "Senior Lecturer" at School of Architecture, Planning & Landscape, Newcastle University. He has been the first Director of Global Urban Research Unit. Sociologist and town planner by background, his current research and publications are on area-based regeneration, urban regeneration, social exclusion and housing and the linkages between them. His current works focus on the housing systems, social inclusion, …
- Geoff Vigar
Geoff Vigar is "Senior Lecturer" at School of Architecture, Planning & Landscape, Newcastle University. Currently he is the Director of Global Urban Research Unit at the university.
- Frank van Dun
Frank Van Dun (born 1947) is a Belgian law philosopher and libertarian natural law theorist.
- Cas Mudde
Cas Mudde is a senior lecturer and former chairman of the Department of Political Science at the University of Antwerp in Belgium. His research includes the areas of political parties, extremism, democracy, civil society and European politics. He is the co-founder and convener of the ECPR (European Consortium for Political Research) Standing Group on Extremism & Democracy.
- Martyn Amos
Martyn Amos is a Senior Lecturer in Computing at Manchester Metropolitan University, and an expert on natural computation and DNA computing. He was born in Hexham, Northumberland in 1971. He graduated with a degree in Computer Science from Coventry University in 1993, before earning a Ph.D. in DNA computing in 1997, from the University of Warwick. He then held a Leverhulme Trust Special Research Fellowship at the University of Liverpool, …
- David Denby
David Denby is an author and academic at Dublin City University:
- Francis Rose
Francis Rose MBE (29 September 1921 – 15 July 2006) was an English field botanist and conservationist. He was an author, researcher and teacher. His ecological interests in Britain and Europe included bryophytes, fungi, higher plants, plant communities and woodlands. Rose was born in south London. He studied natural sciences at Chelsea Polytechnic and Queen Mary College, University of London, graduating with a degree in botany.
- Laurie Duggan
Laurence James Duggan (born 1949) is an Australian poet.
- Lynette Nusbacher
Dr Lynette Nusbacher is a Canadian military historian, a Senior Lecturer at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and a talking head for many historical documentaries. Born in New York City, she grew up on the shores of Lake Ontario. She went to school in Rochester, and took a BA Honours in history and economics at the University of Toronto in 1988, working there in a variety of administrative posts for 6 years. She holds graduate degrees from the Royal Military College of Canada and Oxford.
- Michael Frendo
Michael Frendo (born 1955) is the foreign minister of Malta since the 3rd of July 2004. He had previously served as deputy foreign minister for three months under John Dalli.
- Peter Cusack
Peter Cusack is an artist and musician who is a member of CRiSAP (Creative Research in Sound Art & Performance), and is a research staff member and founding member of the London College of Communication in the University of the Arts London. He was a founding member and director of the London Musicians’ Collective. He is best-known as a member of the avant guard musical quartet, "Alterations" (1978-1986; with Steve Beresford, David Toop, and Terry Day), …
- Jeannie Paterson
Jeannie Marie Paterson is a Senior Lecturer in Contract Law at Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia. She holds a Bachelor of Arts (Honours), a Bachelor of Laws and a PhD Doctor of Philosophy in Contract Law and has had extensive experience in banking and finance law at Mallesons Stephen Jaques, a top-tier Australian law firm. She has co-written two major Australian textbooks on Contract Law: "Contract: cases and materials" by Jeannie Paterson, …
- Tom Perchard
Tom Perchard is a writer and musicologist. He is the author of "Lee Morgan: His Life, Music, and Culture" (Equinox, 2006), the first biography of the jazz trumpeter Lee Morgan (1938–72). His work is concerned with the historical and cultural situation of music-making and listening, focussing specifically on American jazz in the mid-20th century. Since 2006, Perchard has been the senior lecturer in music sociology at the University of Westminster, London.
- Bernhard Riemann
Georg Friedrich Bernhard Riemann (pronounced "REE mahn" or in ; September 17, 1826 - July 20, 1866) was a German mathematician who made important contributions to analysis and differential geometry, some of them paving the way for the later development of general relativity.
- Menahem Stern
Menahem Stern, Israeli historian, one of the greatest researchers of the period of the Second Temple. He received the Israel Prize for History of the Jewish people in 1977. Menahem Stern was born in 1925 in Białystok, Poland. His father was a Lithuanian Jew of the "opposition" (to the Hasidic movement), while his mother came from the south from a Hasidic family. In his childhood he studied Hebrew and theology, …
- Lew Mander
Lew Mander completed a BSc at the University of Auckland, New Zealand in 1960, followed by an MSc in 1961 from the same institution. He then moved to Australia in 1962 to undertake a PhD at The University of Sydney before committing to an initial Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Michigan. Mander then moved to the Caltech in 1965 (after his PhD had been conferred) for two year postdoctoral fellowship.
- Tony Arbour
Anthony Francis Arbour (born August 30, 1945), commonly known as Tony Arbour, is a British Conservative Party politician, a Richmond councillor and member of the London Assembly representing South West London. He was educated at St Andrew's School and Surbiton County Grammar School before going to the then Kingston College of Technology where he earned a BSc in economics. He went on to get an MBA from City University Business School.
- Pamela Gallagher
Pamela Gallagher is an author and academic at Dublin City University
- Robert Orledge
Robert Orledge is a leading scholar of early twentieth century French music. He was born in Bath, Somerset on 5 January 1948 and educated at the City of Bath Boys' School (1958-65) and at Clare College, Cambridge (1965-71) where he gained a BA (Hons) Music degree in 1968 and an MA in 1972. He was awarded a Ph.D. for his thesis: A Study of the Composer Charles Koechlin (1867-1950) in May 1973.
- Erasmus Darwin Barlow
Erasmus Darwin Barlow (15 April 1915 -- 2 August 2005) was a British psychiatrist. Born in London in 1915, he was the second son of Sir Alan Barlow, son of Thomas Barlow, royal physician. His mother was Lady Nora Barlow, daughter of Sir Horace Darwin. He was a great-grandson of the naturalist Charles Darwin. He was named after his great-great-great-grandfather Erasmus Darwin. His elder brother was Commodore Sir Thomas Erasmus Barlow, a younger brother is Horace Barlow.
- Marcia Angell
Marcia Angell , M. D., is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School. She stepped down as Editor-in-Chief of the New England Journal of Medicine on June 30, 2000. A graduate of Boston University School of Medicine, she trained in both internal medicine and anatomic pathology and is a board-certified pathologist.
- Peter Senge
Peter Senge received a B.S. in engineering from Stanford University, an M.S. in social systems modeling and Ph.D. in management from MIT. He lives with his wife and their two children in central Massachusetts. Peter M. Senge is a senior lecturer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
- Lola Young Baroness Young of Hornsey
Margaret Omolola Young, Baroness Young of Hornsey, OBE, (born 1 June 1951), known as Lola Young, is a British artist and teacher. Young was educated at the Parliament Hill School for Girls in London and went then to the New College of Speech and Drama, where she received a diploma in dramatic art in 1975, and a teaching certificate one year later. In 1988 she graduated from Middlesex Polytechnic with a Bachelor of Arts in contemporary cultural studies.
- Thomas Nossiter
Thomas Johnson Nossiter (Tom Nossiter was Professor of Government at the London School of Economics from 1989 until 1994. Nossiter was born in Stockton-on-Tees on 24 December 1937, the son of Alfred and Margaret ("née" Hume) Nossiter. He educated at Stockton Grammar School and did National Service in the Royal Corps of Signals 1956-58 before continuing his education at Exeter College, Oxford (BA, MA), Nuffield College, Oxford (DPhil), …
- Larry C. Napper
Napper served as the U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Latvia from 1995-98. During his tenure, Latvia made decisive strides toward membership in NATO and the EU. From 1998-2001, Ambassador Napper was coordinator for U.S. assistance to Central Europe and the Balkans, administering a $600 million budget for peacekeeping and post-conflict reconstruction.
- Charles Wheelan
Charles Wheelan is a senior lecturer in the Harris Graduate School of Public Policy Studies. Charles Wheelan is a senior lecturer in the Harris School. He received an M.P.A. from Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School in 1993 and a Ph.D. in public policy from the Harris School in 1998.
- Panayiotis Zaphiris
Panayiotis Zaphiris is a Senior Lecturer at the Centre for Human-Computer Interaction Design, School of Informatics of City University, London. Before joining City University, he was a researcher at the Institute of Gerontology at Wayne State University from where he also got his Ph.D. in Human Computer Interaction (HCI). His research interests lie in HCI with an emphasis on inclusive design and social aspects of computing and internet related research (web usability, …
- Daniel Pipes
Daniel Pipes (born September 9, 1949) is an American historian and counter-terrori sm analyst who specializes in the Middle East. He has written or co-written 18 books, maintains a blog, and lectures around the world presenting his analysis of world trends. His work has attracted both admiration and criticism as a result of his view that Islamism is incompatible with democracy, freedom, multiculturalis m, and human rights.
- Dermot Nesbitt
Dermot Nesbitt was born in Belfast and educated at Down High School, Downpatrick, and Queen's University Belfast, from where he was to graduate with a first class honours degree in Economics. Nesbitt then returned to Queen's where he became a Senior Lecturer and later served as Head of the Department of Accounting and Finance (1990-98).
- Paul Burka
Paul Burka joined the staff of TEXAS MONTHLY one year after the magazine's founding. A lifelong Texan, he was born in Galveston, graduated from Rice University with a B.A. in history, and received a J.D. from the University of Texas School of Law. Burka is a member of the State Bar of Texas and spent five years as an attorney with the Texas Legislature, where he served as counsel to the Senate Natural Resources Committee.
- Kimberlee Weatherall
Kimberlee (Kim) Weatherall is a leading Australian intellectual Property lawyer, blogger and academic. Weatherall studied at Oxford and Yale, then worked for Mallesons Stephen Jaques in Sydney before becoming a lecturer at the Melbourne Law School. She is also the Associate Director of the Intellectual Property Research Institute of Australia and board member of the Australian Digital Alliance.