Newby, Sir Howard

Jump to: navigation, search

Sir Howard Newby was born in 1947 and grew up in Derby. He was vice-chancellor of the University of Southampton. His other academic posts include professor of sociology at the University of Essex and visiting appointments in Australia and the United States. From 1980-83 he was professor of sociology and rural sociology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

In August 2001, Sir Howard ended a two-year term as president of Universities UK, the UK body which represents the university sector. His year-long presidency of the British Association ended in September 2002. He was appointed as the Chief Executive of The Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) in October 2001. He is a director of the Universities Superannuation Scheme Limited, chair of trustees for the National Centre for Social Research.

Sir Howard has published many books and articles on social change in rural England and was for eight years a Rural Development Commissioner, a member of the Government body responsible for the economic and social regeneration of rural England. From 1983-88 he was director of the ESRC Data Archive, a national facility for storing and disseminating computerised datasets for use by researchers in the public and private sectors.

Sir Howard was awarded a CBE in 1995 for his services to social science and a knighthood in 2000 for his services to higher education.

He is also a member of the Railway Heritage Committee and trustee of Swindon Steam Railway Museum.

He has been appointed as the vice chancellor of the University of the West of England, starting in 2006


Pages linking here


FEEDBACK

Did you enjoy this article? If so, why not comment on it? Perhaps you disagree with something in it, or you know something the writer doesn't and can add some extra facts. You may want to ask a question about this article. Making a contribution is easy - either click 'edit' to insert more information or 'discussion' and then 'add comment.' This is your site. Please feel free to use it to the full and share your memories, thoughts and knowledge about Derbyshire with others.

If there is no 'edit' link showing it means the article has either previously been published in the Derby Evening Telegraph, or it has been protected by the site administrator and cannot be edited.'


County:  Derbyshire




Return to You and Yesterday

You cannot edit this article. If you want to comment on it, go to the forum
Please enter article title and section to proceed.
Create a new article
Enter article title   belonging to the section

Do you have any old photos you'd like to share?
Upload ImageClick here to upload image

Share this page: del.icio.us | digg | Fark | Furl | BlogMarks