Geoff Mulgan

Dr
Geoff Mulgan
CBE
Mulgan on 24 May 2011
Born 1961 (age 5657)
Alma mater Balliol College, Oxford, University of Westminster
Employer BBC, NESTA
Political party Labour Party

Geoff Mulgan CBE (born 1961) is Chief Executive of the National Endowment for Science Technology and the Arts (NESTA)[1] and Visiting Professor at University College London, the London School of Economics, and the University of Melbourne.

Previously he was:

Mulgan obtained a First Class degree from Balliol College, Oxford[4] and a Ph.D. in telecommunications from the University of Westminster. He was also a Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, trained as a Buddhist monk in Sri Lanka, [5] and worked for a spell during the 1980s as a van driver for the "Labour-supporting collective of musicians and comedians known as Red Wedge",[6] opting ultimately for a career in local government and academia in the UK and going on to become an influential writer on social and political issues in various newspapers and magazines in the 1980s, including The Independent, Financial Times, Guardian, and New Statesman. He worked as a reporter for BBC television and radio, and was made a CBE in 2005.[7]

He has written a number of books, including Communication and Control: Networks and the New Economies of Communication (1991), Politics in an Anti-Political Age (1994), Connexity (1997), Good and Bad Power: the Ideals and Betrayals of Government (Penguin, 2006), and The Art of Public Strategy (2009). His most recent book is The Locust and the Bee (Princeton, 2013) that has been translated into languages including Chinese, Russian, and Arabic.

He has written numerous reports and pamphlets for Demos, the Young Foundation, and Nesta. He has lectured and advised governments around the world on policy and strategy – including China, Australia, the United States, Japan, and Russia – and is seen as one of the pioneers of the global field of social innovation. He is profiled in two books: The New Alchemists (1999, by Charles Handy), and Visionaries (2001, by Jay Walljasper).

He is chair of the Studio Schools Trust; co-chair of the London LEP Digital,Science, Technology and Arts group; a board member of Big Society Capital; and has been a trustee of the Design Council, the Work Foundation, Crime Concern, Involve and Political Quarterly, and a member of various commissions for bodies including the European Commission and the Academy of Medical Science. He has done TED talks on the global economy, education, and happiness.

In 2007-2008 Mulgan was an Adelaide Thinker in Residence advising South Australian Premier Mike Rann on social innovation and social inclusion policies.[8] As a result of Mulgan's recommendations, the Rann Government established The Australian Centre for Social Innovation.[9]

On 19 July 2010, Mulgan was awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Social Science (DSoc Sci) by Nottingham Trent University[10]

References

  1. "News and features - Nesta". www.nesta.org.uk.
  2. Wintour, Patrick; White, Michael (4 September 2003). "Blair pins hopes on sweeping policy changes". the Guardian.
  3. UK Who's Who 2006.
  4. "The swot who knows best". 9 March 1997.
  5. Jay Walljasper, Visionaries, Utne Books, 2001, and Charles Handy, The New Alchemists, Random House, 1999.
  6. Harris, John (26 May 2006). "Geoff Mulgan is the ultimate New Labourite". the Guardian.
  7. "Comment, opinion and discussion from the Guardian US". the Guardian.
  8. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 26 January 2014. Retrieved 2014-01-22.
  9. http://www.tacsi.org.au/
  10. Nottingham Trent University (21 July 2010). "Dr Geoff Mulgan - NTU Honorary Graduate - 19th July 2010" via YouTube.
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