University of East Anglia

University of East Anglia

University of East Anglia coat of arms
Motto Do Different
Type Public research university
Established 1963
Endowment £7.3 million (2014/15)[1]
Chancellor Karen Jones CBE[2]
Vice-Chancellor David Richardson[3]
Administrative staff
3,910[4]
Students 16,265 (2014/15)[5]
Undergraduates 11,445 (2014/15)[5]
Postgraduates 4,820 (2014/15)[5]
Location Norwich, Norfolk, United Kingdom
52°37′18″N 1°14′30″E / 52.62167°N 1.24167°E / 52.62167; 1.24167Coordinates: 52°37′18″N 1°14′30″E / 52.62167°N 1.24167°E / 52.62167; 1.24167
Campus 320 acres (130 ha)[6]
Chair of Council Joe Greenwell CBE
Colours           Blue & yellow[7]
Affiliations ACU
AMBA
Eastern ARC
EUA
Universities UK
Norwich Research Park
Website www.uea.ac.uk

The University of East Anglia (abbreviated as UEA) is an English public research university located in the city of Norwich.[8] Established in 1963, the university comprises four faculties and 26 schools of study.[9] Situated to the south-west of the city of Norwich, the university campus is approximately 320 acres (130 hectares) in size.

In national league tables the university has most recently been ranked 15th in the UK by The Times and Sunday Times and 14th by The Complete University Guide.[10][11][12] The university also ranks among the top 3 for student satisfaction in the National Student Survey, when considering mainstream English universities. It is the only institution to rank in the top 5 since the survey began.[13] The university also ranks in the world top 1% according to the Times Higher Education World Rankings (2015/16)[14] and within the World Top 100 for research excellence in the Leiden Ranking (2016).[15]

History

1960s

Denys Lasdun's Ziggurats accommodation

Attempts had been made to establish a university in Norwich in 1919 and 1947, but due to a lack of government funding on both occasions the plans had to be postponed. The University of East Anglia was eventually given the green light in April 1960, and opened its doors in October 1963 to biological sciences and English studies students. Initially, teaching took place in the temporary "University Village". Sited on the opposite side of the Earlham Road to the present campus, this was a collection of prefabricated structures designed for 1200 students, laid out by the local architectural firm Feilden and Mawson. There were no residences. The vice-chancellor and administration were based in nearby Earlham Hall.[16]

In 1961, the first vice-chancellor, Frank Thistlethwaite, had approached Denys Lasdun, an adherent of the "New Brutalist" trend in architecture, who was at that time building Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, to produce designs for the permanent campus.[16] The site chosen was on the western edge of the city, on the south side of Earlham Road. The land, formerly part of the Earlham Hall estate was at that time occupied by a golf course.[17] Lasdun unveiled a model and an outline plan at a press conference in April 1963, but it took another year to produce detailed plans, which diverged considerably from the model. The first buildings did not open until late 1966.[16]

Lasdun put all the teaching and research functions into the "teaching wall", a single block 460 metres (1,510 feet) long following the contour of the site. Alongside this he built a walkway, giving access to the various entrances of the wall, with access roads beneath. Attached to the other, southern, side of the walkway he added the groups of terraced residences that became known as "Ziggurats". In 1968, Lasdun was replaced as architect by Bernard Feilden, who completed the teaching wall and library and created an arena-shaped square as a social space of a kind not envisioned in his predecessor's plans.[16] They would later become Grade II* listed status,[18] reflecting the importance of the architecture and the history of the campus.

In 1964 Arthur Miller's The Crucible became the first drama production to be staged at UEA with John Rhys Davies (later to appear in The Lord of the Rings trilogy), the drama society's first president.[19] In the same decade, in 1965, Benjamin Britten was appointed music adviser for UEA. In 1967 he conducted the UEA Choir in a performance of his War Requiem. In 1968 there were two royal visits from Princess Margaret and the Queen who each came to tour the new university for the first time.[19]

1970s

Entrance to the Sainsbury Centre from the UEA campus

In this decade Malcolm Bradbury and Angus Wilson help establish the first creative writing course in the UK. The School of Literature, Drama, and Creative Writing would later go on to produce successful authors including Kazuo Ishiguro, Ian McEwan, Rose Tremain, John Boyne and Andrew Miller. In the same decade UEA:TV, under the name of Nexus, was formed and created student-made television. It operated for two hours a day over lunchtime. Concrete, the student newspaper was first officially launched in 1973, replacing Mandate which launched in 1965. Over the years students also enjoyed Phoenix, Can Opener, Mustard Magazine and Kett before Concrete re-launched in 1992.[19]

In 1972 the Centre for Climatic Research opened, founded by climatologist Hubert Lamb. Also notable in the same year, architect Bernard Feilden helped the university win a Civic Trust Award for the design of the Square, the university's main social space. A year later work began on the university lake, or Broad, as it is more commonly referred to. It involved excavating 18 acres of gravel, which was arranged as part of a 'no money' deal where a local aggregate company took the gravel for free leaving with a landscaped body of water fed by the River Yare.[19]

In the 1970s the School of Computing Sciences first opened at UEA, and the university started offering education degrees from Keswick Hall, a manor house owned by the Gurney family and situated on the outskirts of Norwich. Initially this was only a postgraduate qualification, until the late 1970s when an undergraduate course was created. The gift of a collection of tribal art and 20th-century painting and sculpture, by artists such as Francis Bacon and Henry Moore, from Sir Robert Sainsbury and Lady Lisa Sainsbury resulted in the construction of the striking Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts at the western end of the main teaching wall, one of the first major works of architect Norman Foster. The UEA's School of Fine Art opened in the same year of 1978.[19]

1980s

Earlham Hall, childhood home of Elizabeth Fry, is now home to UEA Law School.

In 1984 the School of Law first moved to Earlham Hall. The building, dating back to 1580, was once home to many famous residents including Elizabeth Fry and the Gurney family.[20]

In 1986 the Climatic Research Unit was opened within the Hubert Lamb Building. It had been named after Lamb who retired from the university in 1978.

In 1989 the British Centre for Literary Translation was founded by WG Sebald, and The Arthur Miller Centre for American Studies was set up to encourage and facilitiate the study of the United States. Arthur Miller later in 2000 went on to spend his 85th birthday at UEA when he was made an honorary graduate. In the same year Kazuo Ishiguro won the Man Booker Prize and became one of three UEA graduates who would receive the award, along with Ian McEwan and Anne Enright.[19]

1990s

John Peel opening the student radio station Livewire

In 1990 the student radio station Livewire1350AM launched, completing the university's student media collective of print, television, and radio. It was opened by Radio 1 DJ John Peel and is now said to be one of the longest running student radio stations in the country.[21] In 1993 the Union of UEA Students took over the management of The Waterfront, a music venue and nightclub. It has hosted performers including Pulp, Radiohead, Arctic Monkeys, Marina and the Diamonds and Amy Winehouse.

In 1994 the Queen returned to UEA to open the Queen's Building, which hosts a number of classes within the School of Health Sciences. In the same year Prince Charles visited the School of Environmental Sciences.[19] In 1995 the Elizabeth Fry building was opened, providing new facilities for almost 800 students.

2000s

In 2000 UEA's reputation within the field of environmental research led to the government choosing the university as the site for the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research. The centre, named after the 19th-century UK scientist John Tyndall, brings together scientists, economists, engineers and social scientists from eight partner institutions.[22]

In 2001 the Sportspark, a multi-sports facilities built thanks to a £14.5 million grant from the Sport England Lottery Fund, was formally opened by Princess Anne and brought international sporting facilities to Norwich. The Sportspark houses an Olympic-sized pool, floodlit astro-pitches, and the tallest climbing wall in Norfolk.[23]

In the same year UEA alumnus Sir Paul Nurse was awarded the Nobel Prize for Medicine. He won the prize jointly with Timothy Hunt and Leland Hartwell "for their discoveries of key regulators of the cell cycle".

In 2002 UEA's Medical School opened with 110 students enrolled. The school is a collaboration with the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital and world-class research centres now part of the Norwich Research Park. In 2003 the School of Pharmacy opened, along with the Zuckerman Institute for Connective Environmental Research (ZICER). The walkways, the Teaching Wall, and Ziggurats also gained Grade II listed status following a government consultation.[24]

In 2004 the University of East Anglia was first represented on long-running TV quiz show University Challenge. The university's best performance on the show was in December 2012 when four high-profile alumni took place in a special series, coming second in a final against New College Oxford.

In 2005 the university, in partnership with the University of Essex and with the support of Suffolk County Council, the East of England Development Agency, Ipswich Borough Council, Suffolk College and the Learning and Skills Council, secured £15 million funding from the Higher Education Funding Council for England for the creation of a new campus in the Waterfront area of Ipswich, called University Campus Suffolk or UCS.[25] The campus opened in September 2007.[25] In May 2016 it became independent of the UEA and was renamed to the University of Suffolk.[26]

In 2006 the university opened Victory House, named after Lord Nelson's ship. The event took place on the anniversary of Lord Nelson's birth by his descendant Lord Walpole.

In 2008 INTO University Partnerships opened a £35m six-storey building named INTO University of East Anglia with 415 en-suite study-bedrooms and classroom space for 600 students. The institution, which works closely with UEA, focuses on the provision of foundation courses for international students, including English language, especially English for academic purposes. Shortly after opening, similar partnerships were created between INTO and Exeter and Newcastle.[27]

In November 2009, computer servers at the university's Climatic Research Unit were hacked and the stolen information made public. Over 1,000 emails, 2,000 documents, and source code were released. Because the Climate Research Unit is a major repository for data regarding man-made global warming, the release, which occurred directly prior to the 2009 United Nations Climate Change Conference, attracted international attention and led to calls for an inquiry.[28] As a result, no fewer than eight investigations were launched in both the UK and US, but none found evidence of fraud or scientific misconduct, and the academics were subsequently fully exonerated.[29]

2010 - Present

In 2010 the Thomas Paine Study Centre was opened by playwright, Trevor Griffiths. Named after the local luminary and visionary thinker, the building became home to the Norwich Business School. In 2012 the university won its second Queen's Anniversary Prize for its distinguished creative writing programme, having won one previously for its School of International Development. The award helped bolster the region's reputation as a literary hub, and helped Norwich to achieve its status as England's first UNESCO City of Literature in 2012.[19]

In 2013 the university celebrated its 50th anniversary,[30] and ranking Number 1 in the Times Higher Education Magazine Student Experience league table.[31] It was in this year UEA also launched its first free Massive open online course (Mooc) in partnership with Future Learn.[32] Topics covered by UEA's Moocs over the years have included branding, screenwriting, environmental justice and food fraud.

In 2014 UEA opened what was its most environmentally-friendly building yet, Crome Court, which has won a number of awards for sustainability.[33] Also in 2014 part of the campus was used as Avengers HQ during filming of the Avengers Age of Ultron and Ant Man film. Robert Downey Jr was spotted on the grounds during filming, and a number of students were employed as extras.[34]

In 2015 'Britain's Greenest Building', The Enterprise Centre, opened on campus, helping the university win further awards for its environmental credentials.[35] Also in 2015 parts of campus played host to Radio 1's Big Weekend which was officially located at Earlham Park. International acts including Fall Out Boy, Muse, Foo Fighters and Taylor Swift performed. Swift used the grounds at Earlham Hall as her dressing room.[36]

In late September 2016 two new accommodation blocks opened. Barton House and Hickling House were named after the parts of the Norfolk Broads and have increased the number of rooms available to new students.[37] In this year the Vice-Chancellor David Richardson unveiled a '2030 vision' which includes a £300m investment in campus - refurbishing existing buildings as well as building new teaching and learning spaces.[38]

Campus

The Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts was designed by Lord Foster to house the art collection of Sir Robert Sainsbury and Lady Lisa Sainsbury, whose daughter attended UEA.

Features of the UEA campus include Earlham Hall, childhood home of Elizabeth Fry, which is now home to UEA Law School; the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts at the western end of the main teaching wall designed by Norman Foster to house the art collection of Sir Robert Sainsbury and Lady Lisa Sainsbury, it also features as the new avengers headquarters in Avengers: Age of Ultron, Ant Man and Marvel Cinematic Universe films; and Sportspark, a multi-sports facilities built in 2001 thanks to a £14.5 million grant from Sport England Lottery Fund.[23]

The campus is regularly evolving, and now stretches across the Norwich Research Park with the Edith Cavell Building and the Bob Champion Research and Education Building considered part of its campus over by the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital.[39] Newest buildings on the campus include two new accommodation blocks, and the Enterprise Centre, said to be Britain's greenest building.[40]

Other features include the large university lake or "broad" at the southern edge of campus and "The Square", a central outdoor meeting place flanked by concrete steps.

Accommodation blocks on the university campus include Constable Terrace, Nelson Court, and Britten, Paston, Colman, Victory, Kett and Browne Houses. These residences are named after Horatio Nelson, John Constable, Benjamin Britten, Jeremiah Colman, Horatio Nelson's ship HMS Victory, Robert Kett, Sir Thomas Browne and the Paston family who wrote the Paston Letters. The Ziggurat accommodation blocks are Grade II listed. The university also manages Mary Chapman Court, a hall of residence in Norwich city centre, and the University Village, a short walk away from campus.[41] UEA's accommodation block, Crome Court, opened in September 2014, containing the university's most eco-friendly flats.[42] Two new blocks; Hicking and Barton House (named after the broads) opened in September 2016.

Colman House Accommodation

Facilities on campus include the Union Pub and Bar, a 24-hour library, a concert and gig venue called the LCR (Lower Common Room), a canteen called the Campus Kitchen, a cafe/coffee shop called the Blend, a bar/coffee shop called Unio, a graduate bar called the Scholar's Bar and The Street with a 24-hour launderette, the Union shop, a coffee shop called Ziggy's, a branch of Barclays bank, and a Waterstones book shop. Most of these are situated in the centre of the campus, next to the Square. Other food establishments situated on campus include Café 57 and the Bio Cafe.[43] There is also a medical centre, dentist, and pharmacy, located on the eastern side of the campus.

The campus is linked to the city centre and railway station by frequent buses, operated by First Norfolk & Suffolk, via Unthank Road or Earlham Road. Other transport links include First buses to the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital and to Bowthorpe, as well as Konectbus services to Watton, Dereham and Costessey via park and ride. National Express provides coach services to London, and Megabus operates low cost intercity travel to cities including Cambridge, Birmingham, Bristol and Cardiff.[44]

Academic profile

The postgraduate master of arts in creative writing, founded by Sir Malcolm Bradbury and Sir Angus Wilson in 1970, is regarded as the most respected in the United Kingdom, and admission to the programme is competitive.[45] The course has gone on to produce a number of distinguished authors, including Ian McEwan, Kazuo Ishiguro, Anne Enright, Tash Aw, Andrew Miller, Owen Sheers, Tracy Chevalier, Trezza Azzopardi, Panos Karnezis and Suzannah Dunn. The German émigré novelist W. G. Sebald also taught in the School of Literature and Creative Writing, and founded the British Centre for Literary Translation, until his death in a car accident in 2001.[46] Experimental novelist Alan Burns was the university's first writer-in-residence.[47]

The Climatic Research Unit, founded in 1972 by Hubert Lamb in the School of Environmental Sciences[48] has been an early centre of work for climate change research. Publications include the recent 2008 Climatic Research Unit study on anthropogenic polar warming. The school was also stated to be "the strongest in the world" by the chief scientific adviser to the UK government, Sir David King during a lecture at the John Innes Centre in 2005.[49]

Rankings

Rankings
ARWU[50]
(2016, national)
22-28
ARWU[51]
(2016, world)
201-300
QS[52]
(2016/17, national)
35
QS[53]
(2016/17, world)
252
THE[54]
(2016/17, national)
25
THE[55]
(2016/17, world)
165
Complete[12]
(2017, national)
14
The Guardian[56]
(2017, national)
24
Times/Sunday Times[57]
(2017, national)
15

The results of the Research Excellence Framework (REF), published on 18 December 2014, showed that over 82% of the University's research activity was deemed to be "world leading" or "internationally excellent".[58] UEA was ranked 10th in the UK for the quality of its research outputs and 21st overall amongst all mainstream British institutions - a rise of 12 places since the last assessment in 2008.[59]

The university ranks in the world top 1% according to the Times Higher Education world rankings 2015/16[14] and within the world top 100 for research excellence in the Leiden Ranking 2016.[15]

In 2012 the university was named the 10th best university in the world under 50 years old, and third best within the United Kingdom.[60] In national league tables the university has most recently been ranked 18th in the UK by The Times and Sunday Times, and 14th by The Complete University Guide.[10][11][12]

In April 2013 the university was ranked number one for student experience according to Times Higher Education Magazine.[13] It currently ranks Top 3 for student satisfaction in the National Student Survey when ranking mainstream English universities. UEA is the only institution to rank top five since the survey began.[13]

Admissions

In 2014 the ratio of applications to acceptances was 5.9 to 1. In 2014 the proportion of students admitted to the university from independent schools was 12%.[61]

Organisation

Faculties and schools

The Queen's Building

The university offers over 300 courses in its four faculties, which contain 26 schools of study:[4]

Constable Terrace, UEA accommodation
Faculty of Arts and Humanities
  • Art, Media and American Studies
  • History
  • Interdisciplinary Institute for the Humanities
  • Literature, Drama and Creative Writing
  • Politics, Philosophy and Language and Communication Studies
Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Faculty of Science
  • Actuarial Sciences
  • Biological Sciences
  • Biochemistry
  • Chemistry
  • Computing Sciences
  • Engineering
  • Environmental Sciences
  • Geography
  • Mathematics
  • Natural Sciences
  • Pharmacy
  • Physics
Faculty of Social Sciences

Student life

Main article: Union of UEA Students
UEA Student Union Logo

All students of the university and some INTO UEA students automatically become members of the union, but do have the right to opt out of membership. Membership confers the ability to take part in the union's activities such as clubs and societies, and being involved in the democratic processes of the union. The union is a democratic organisation run by its members via an elected student officer committee and student council. It is affiliated to the National Union of Students.

The UEA Student Union has over 200 sports clubs and societies ranging from a men and women's football clubs and cheerleading society to a Quidditch team.[62] The UEA Media Collective encompasses the student newspaper Concrete, UEA:TV (previously named Nexus UTV)[63] and the student radio station Livewire 1350AM. One of its more famous former presenters and managers is Greg James, the BBC Radio 1 presenter.[64]

The UEA Student Union brings together the student community through its events like Pimp My Barrow, which has become an annual fundraising event for The Big C, and involves ingeniously decorated wheelbarrows. It has raised more than £50,000 for the Norfolk charity.[65] The annual Derby Day sports event sees UEA take on the University of Essex in approximately 40 sports. UEA has won the Derby Day trophy all four times since 2012.[66]

The UEA Student Union also organises gigs and club nights at the Nick Rayns LCR, or Lower[67] Common Room in Union House. The LCR is home to hundreds of music gigs every year. The students' union also runs the Waterfront venue, off campus in Norwich's King Street. Acts to have performed at these venues include Coldplay, U2, Haim, The Smiths, Red Hot Chili Peppers, and Iron Maiden

The union also operates a number of other services within Union House. This includes the Union Pub and Bar, Scholar's Bar, and Unio. Its building underwent a refurbishment in 2015 after a £6 million investment from the university.[68]

Public events

The university's lecture theatres regularly host film screenings, discussions, lectures and presentations for the public to attend.[69]

UEA Literary Festival

The University hosted its inaugural literary festival in 1991 and has welcomed notable speakers including Madeleine Albright, Martin Amis, Martin Bell, Alan Bennett, Cherie Blair, Melvyn Bragg, Eleanor Catton, Richard Dawkins, Alain de Botton, Sebastian Faulks, Niall Ferguson, Stephen Fry, Frank Gardner, Richard E. Grant, Germaine Greer, Seamus Heaney, Clive James, P. D. James, Doris Lessing, Mario Vargas Llosa, Hilary Mantel, Iris Murdoch, Rageh Omaar, Michael Palin, Jeremy Paxman, Harold Pinter, Stephen Poliakoff, Terry Pratchett, Salman Rushdie, Simon Schama, Will Self, John Simpson, Zadie Smith, Paul Theroux, Peter Ustinov, Shirley Williams and Robert Winston.[70]

Notable alumni

Lasker Award winner Michael Houghton (BSc, 1972) co-discoverered Hepatitis C in 1989
1989 Booker Prize winner Kazuo Ishiguro (MA, 1980)
1998 Booker Prize winner Ian McEwan (MA, 1971)
2007 Booker Prize winner Anne Enright (MA, 1988)

UEA alumni in the sciences include the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine laureate and former President of the Royal Society Sir Paul Nurse (PhD, 1973);[71] Robert Koch Prize, Lasker Award and Gairdner Foundation International Award winning co-discoverer of Hepatitis C and of the Hepatitis D genome Michael Houghton (Biological Sciences, 1972);[72][73] Darwin Medal, Darwin–Wallace Medal and Erwin Schrödinger Prize winning evolutionary biologist Nick Barton (PhD, 1979);[74] Potamkin Prize winning pathologist Karen Duff (Biological Sciences, 1987);[75] climate scientists Tim Lenton,[76] Chris Turney,[77] Neil Adger,[78] Benjamin D. Santer,[79] Keith Briffa,[80] Timothy Osborn,[81] and Peter Thorne;[82] and the Fellows of the Royal Society James Barber,[83] Mervyn Bibb,[84] Richard Flavell,[85] Don Grierson,[86] Brian Hemmings,[87] Terence Rabbitts,[88] and Nick Talbot.[89]

Literary alumni include the renowned German writer W. G. Sebald (PhD, 1973),[90] three Booker Prize winners, Ian McEwan (Creative Writing, 1971),[91] Kazuo Ishiguro (Creative Writing, 1980),[91] and Anne Enright (Creative Writing, 1988);[91] Costa Book Award (formerly Whitbread Award) winners Rose Tremain (Creative Writing, 1967),[92] Andrew Miller (Creative Writing, 1991),[93] David Almond (English Literature, 1993),[94] Tash Aw (Creative Writing, 2003),[95] Emma Healey (Creative Writing, 2011),[96] Susan Fletcher (Creative Writing, 2002),[97] Adam Foulds (Creative Writing, 2001),[98] Avril Joy (History of Art, 1972) and Christie Watson (Creative Writing, 2009); and the Caine Prize winners Binyavanga Wainaina (MPhil, 2010), Helon Habila (PhD, 2008) and Henrietta Rose-Innes (PhD). Other alumni include Tracy Chevalier (Creative Writing, 1994),[99] John Boyne (Creative Writing, 1996),[100] Neel Mukherjee (Creative Writing, 2001), Mick Jackson (Creative Writing, 1992), Trezza Azzopardi (Creative Writing, 1998), Paul Murray (Creative Writing, 2001), James Scudamore (Creative Writing, 2006), Mohammed Hanif (Creative Writing, 2005), Richard House (PhD, 2008), Sebastian Barker (English Literature, 1970), Clive Sinclair (BA, 1969; PhD, 1983), Kathryn Hughes (Creative Writing, 1986) and Peter J. Conradi.

Alumni in international politics and government include the current King of Tonga Tupou VI (Development Studies, 1980) who also served as Prime Minister of Tonga from 2000 to 2006 and Foreign Minister from 1998 to 2004;[101] Governor General of Grenada Sir Carlyle Glean (Education, 1982);[102] Governor of Gibraltar Sir Robert Fulton (Social Sciences, 1970) who was formerly Commandant General Royal Marines;[103] Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Murat Karayalçın (Development Economics, 1977) who also served as Foreign Minister;[104] Kiribati Vice President Teima Onorio (Education, 1990);[105] Finance Ministers of Australia (Mathias Cormann), Thailand (Suchart Thada-Thamrongvech) and Rwanda (Donald Kaberuka, later President of the African Development Bank);[106][107][108] Foreign Ministers of Iceland (Össur Skarphéðinsson) and The Gambia (Ousman Jammeh);[109][110] current Maldivian Defence Minister Adam Shareef, Bruneian Education Minister Suyoi Osman, Cypriot Transport Minister Marios Demetriades, and Kenyan Sports and Culture Minister Hassan Wario; and former Cabinet Ministers of Turkey (Cüneyd Düzyol), Peru (Gino Costa), South Africa (Tito Mboweni, later Governor of the South African Reserve Bank), Egypt (Gamal El-Araby), Tanzania (Juma Ngasongwa), Rwanda (Daphrose Gahakwa), Ethiopia (Sinknesh Ejigu and Junedin Sado), Seychelles (Rolph Payet and Peter Sinon) and Yemen (Yahya Al-Mutawakel). Foreign members of parliament include parliamentarians of Portugal (Rubina Berardo), Bhutan (Choida Jamtsho), the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Aimé Boji), Oman (Hilal Al Sarmi), Bahrain (Mohamed Ali Hasan Ali), Brunei (Salbiah Haji Sulaiman), Nigeria (Yusuf Abubakar Yusuf and Eddie Mbadiwe), Dominica (Alvin Bernard), South Africa (Stone Sizani), Mozambique (Manuel de Araújo), Australia (Dee Margetts), Hong Kong (Cheng Kai-nam), Mexico (Julio Boltvinik and Óscar González), Peru (Manuel Lajo) and East Timor (José Abel).

Alumni in UK politics include the UKIP Member of Parliament Douglas Carswell (History, 1993);[111] Shadow Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Rachael Maskell (Physiotherapy, 1994),[112] and the Labour Members of Parliament Caroline Flint (American Literature, History & Film, 1983),[113] and Karin Smyth (Politics, 1988);[114] two former Leaders of the House of Lords, Valerie Amos, Baroness Amos (Applied Research in Education, 1978),[115] and Thomas Galbraith, 2nd Baron Strathclyde (Modern Languages & European Studies, 1982);[116] the Liberal Democrat peer Rosalind Scott, Baroness Scott of Needham Market (European Studies, 1999);[117] and the Conservative Member of the Scottish Parliament Adam Tomkins (Law, 1990).[118] UEA is also the alma mater of the former Crossbench peer Tim Bentinck, 12th Earl of Portland (History of Art, 1975);[119] former Members of Parliament Tony Colman (International Development), Jon Owen Jones (Ecology, 1975), Tess Kingham (Education), Judith Chaplin and Ivor Stanbrook (Law, 1995);[120][121][122][123][124] and the former Member of the European Parliament David Thomas (English & Law).[125]

In the arts alumni include the actors Matt Smith (Drama, 2005),[126] John Rhys-Davies,[127] Jack Davenport (English & American Literature, 1995),[128] James Frain (Drama, 1990),[129] and Roger Ashton-Griffiths (PhD, 2015);[130] comedians Paul Whitehouse,[131] Charlie Higson (English & American Literature),[100] Simon Day (Drama, 1989),[132] Arthur Smith (Comparative Literature, 1976),[133] and Nina Conti (Philosophy, 1995);[134] film director Gurinder Chadha (Development Economics, 1983);[127] art historians Philip Mould (History of Art, 1981),[135] Bendor Grosvenor (PhD, 2009),[136] and Paul Atterbury (Archaeology & Landscape History, 1972);[137] Chief Executive of the Royal Opera House Mary Allen (Creative Writing, 2003);[138] Chief Executive of English National Opera Séan Doran (Music 1983); BAFTA award winning production designer Don Homfray (History, 1999),[139] and the Emmy Award winning choirmaster Gareth Malone (Drama, 1997).[140]

Alumni in the media include the Sky News Europe correspondent Mark Stone (History of Art and Architecture, 2001), news correspondents Razia Iqbal (American Studies, 1985),[100] Geraint Vincent (History, 1994),[141] David Grossman (Politics, 1987),[100] and Selina Scott (English & American Literature, 1972); Radio 1 presenter Greg James (Drama, 2007);[141] political commentator Iain Dale (German & Linguistics, 1985);[142] Editor-in-Chief of Cosmopolitan Joanna Coles (English & American Literature);[143] BBC executives Dame Jenny Abramsky (English),[144] Jonathan Powell (English Literature),[145] and James Boyle; and the weather forecasters Darren Bett (Environmental Sciences, 1989) and Penny Tranter (Environmental Sciences, 1982).[146][147]

UEA alumni in business and economics include the Argentine billionaire businessman and real estate developer Eduardo Costantini,[148] the founders of Autonomy (David Tabizel) and Café Rouge (Karen Jones), and CEOs of ICI, Jaguar Land Rover, Proton, Premier Foods, Diageo, Punch Taverns, Computacenter and Pier 1 Imports. UEA is also the alma mater of the explorer Benedict Allen (Environmental Sciences, 1981);[149] England rugby player Andy Ripley;[150] football commentator Martin Tyler (Sociology, 1967),[151] and the Bishop of Ramsbury Ed Condry (BA, 1974).[152]

Notable academics

See also Category:Academics of the University of East Anglia

UEA has benefited from the services of academics at the top of their fields, including Sir Malcolm Bradbury and Sir Angus Wilson who co-founded the MA in Creative Writing programme;[153][154] Hubert Lamb who founded the Climatic Research Unit; Lord Zuckerman who was influential in the establishment of the School of Environmental Sciences;[155] Nobel Prize–winning chemist Richard Synge;[156] scientists Sir David King,[157] Sir David Baulcombe,[158] Tom Wigley, Godfrey Hewitt, Michael Balls, Andrew Watson,[159] Christopher Lamb,[160] Alan Katritzky,[161] Jean Palutikof, Michael Gale,[162] Roy Markham,[163] Geoffrey Boulton,[164] Johnson Cann,[165] Hans Joachim Schellnhuber,[166] John Alwyne Kitching,[167] Thomas Bennet-Clark[168] and Jeremy Greenwood;[169] writers Angela Carter and Sarah Churchwell;[170] poet George Szirtes; poet laureate Sir Andrew Motion[171][171] historians Sir Richard Evans,[172] Paul Kennedy,[173] Patricia Hollis[174] and Michael Balfour; art historians Peter Lasko and Eric Fernie; philosopher Martin Hollis;[175] psychologist Dame Shirley Pearce; musician Sir Philip Ledger;[176] political scientists Lord Williams of Baglan and Sir Steve Smith; Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis, and the High Court Judges Sir Clive Lewis[177] and Dame Beverley Lang.[178]

Present faculty include former IPCC Chairman Sir Robert Watson;[179] scientists Sir David Hopwood,[180] Phil Jones,[181] Corinne Le Quéré, Jonathan D. G. Jones,[182] Enrico Coen,[183] Frederick Vine[184] and Peter Liss;[185] sociologist Sir Tom Shakespeare, 3rd baronet;[186] writers Giles Foden,[187] and Christopher Bigsby; and the former Home Secretary Charles Clarke.[188]

Administration

Chancellors

Chancellor from 1965 to 1984 Oliver Franks, Baron Franks

Vice-Chancellors

References

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