David Price (British academic)

Geoffrey David Price FGS (born 12 January 1956)[1] has been Vice-Provost (Research) of UCL (University College London) since 2007 and Professor of Mineral Physics in the UCL Department of Earth Sciences since 1991.

Price is responsible for promoting, supporting and facilitating UCL research, including securing the highest-quality research outputs across UCL, and leading the development and implementation of the UCL Research Strategy.

As a scientist, Price was one of the first to establish the now major field of computational mineral physics, and has published more than 220 research papers.

Education and early career

Price is the son of the geologist Neville J. Price.

In 1974, prior to going to university, Price was an Assistant Scientific Officer at the National Physical Laboratory, Teddington, UK, researching dispersive Fourier transform spectroscopy. At the University of Cambridge, Price read Natural Sciences and graduated with a 1st Class Honours Bachelor of Arts from Clare College in 1977.

From 1977 to 1980, he was a Natural Environment Research Council Research Student at the University of Cambridge, and received a PhD in 1981; his doctoral thesis was entitled Aspects of Transformation Behaviour in Olivine, Pyroxenes and Titanomagnetites. From 1980 to 1981, Price was a Fulbright-Hayes Scholar and Research Associate at the University of Chicago’s Department of the Geophysical Sciences, and, from 1981 to 1983, a Research Fellow at Clare College, University of Cambridge and Natural Environment Research Council Research Fellow, University of Cambridge Department of Earth Sciences.

In 1983, Price became a Royal Society University Research Fellow at UCL, where he has since held a variety of academic and management positions. He discovered the mineral wadsleyite, which is believed to make up part of the transition zone of the Earth’s mantle, from a depth of 400 km to 550 km.[2]

As UCL Vice-Provost (Research)

UCL, which describes itself as “London’s Global University”[3] and “London’s Research Powerhouse”,[4] has more than 4,000 research staff across a breadth of academic disciplines.[5] In the most recent (2008) Research Assessment Exercise, for 43 of 49 submissions at least 50% of UCL's quality profile was either 4* ("of world-leading quality”) or 3* ("internationally excellent"), placing it third overall in the UK after Oxford and Cambridge.[6] Income from research grants and contracts, at £275.1 million, is the largest component of UCL's income.[5]

As UCL Vice-Provost (Research), Price is responsible to the UCL President and Provost for: promoting, supporting and facilitating UCL’s research performance; leading the implementation of UCL’s research strategy; leading UCL’s preparation for future research assessment exercises; and the implementation of full economic costing for research and subsequently teaching.[7] He is also responsible for:

Upon appointment in 2007, Price said: “UCL is a world-class centre for research, and it is my aim to help develop an environment in which the research community here can grow and achieve still greater levels of excellence. UCL has global expertise across the entire spectrum of academia, and researchers here are uniquely placed to provide solutions to major international problems, such as global health, the development of the urban environment and intercultural understanding. I hope to enable the study of such interdisciplinary problems, which consequently will allow UCL to continue to make a global and national contribution to scholarship and to provide solutions to real-world issues.”[9]

Other current appointments

In 2011 Price was appointed a Non-Executive Director, North Middlesex University Hospital NHS Trust.[10] Since 2010, he has held the following appointments:

Honours

Price has been elected to:

Price’s other honors and awards include:

Previous UCL appointments

Other previous appointments

Price's implementation of the UCL Research Strategy

Price devised and introduced the first-ever UCL research strategy, Maximizing Impact and Influence Globally, in 2008. It stated: “[I]n the recent past, universities have not been seen major forces for social change. UCL’s new research strategy will help realise the radical vision of its founders, who, following [Jeremy] Bentham, believed that education, and hence universities, were the key to reform. … With its unique strengths and position, UCL has an opportunity and an obligation to develop and disseminate original knowledge to help provide solutions to the grand challenges faced by the world today and tomorrow.”[24]


The strategy's basis was that the collective expertise of the whole of UCL is greater than the sum of its subject-specific parts. By collaborating across disciplines, therefore, the university could address major problems most effectively.

A culture of wisdom

Refined and expanded by Price in 2011, the UCL Research Strategy advocates the delivery of a culture of wisdom: “The world’s major problems (for example, in the economic, environmental, health and cultural spheres) are complex, systemic, interconnected and urgent to an unprecedented degree. Wisdom – here defined as the judicious application of knowledge for the good of humanity – is the key to providing solutions to aspects of these global problems. It can arise through bringing together different expert perspectives to address issues in their full complexity. Delivering a culture of wisdom, therefore, means drawing on the full range of our expertise. It requires a spirit of collaboration and a recognition that the contribution of which each of us is capable can be vastly greater when made in concert.”[25]

Times Higher Education described Price as asserting that "since the Thatcher era, universities had adopted the prevailing political view of them as "the engines of the knowledge economy", leading them to neglect wisdom, which he defined as "the judicious application of knowledge for the good of humanity". He cited the huge increase in maize prices prompted by the staple food crop's use as a source of biofuel as a "classic case of the application of very clever knowledge without developing a wise way of introducing it". The problem, he said, was that few universities possessed the breadth of top researchers necessary to generate wisdom, which required the "synthesising and contrasting of the knowledge, perspectives and methodologies of different disciplines"."[26]

The cores aims of the UCL Research Strategy are: fostering leadership founded in excellence; cross-disciplinarity grounded in expertise; and realising the impact of a global university.[25]

Leadership

Beyond demonstrable research excellence and effective dissemination of research results, the UCL Research Strategy called for established researchers to demonstrate sustained leadership: in their subject, for example by developing novel lines of enquiry; by contributing to the intellectual life of their discipline; cultivating collegiallity in their department, faculty and university; and supporting and nurturing early career researchers and research students.[25]

The Times Higher Education article noted: "Another key concept in the research strategy is "leadership", which Professor Price distinguished from excellence on the grounds that it was active rather than passive. As well as being eminent researchers, their leadership obligations would also require senior UCL academics to "be putting back into their discipline by doing professional service, and into the institution by managing and developing strategic areas in their own departments and leading career development of younger colleagues". Younger academics, for their part, should be "developing their leading position in their subject and nurturing students".[26]

Cross-disciplinarity

The UCL Research Strategy stated: “It is through cross-disciplinary interaction between research leaders that our work will become best-placed to yield solutions that can address effectively aspects of the major global issues of the 21st century. UCL will, therefore, increase and strengthen as appropriate cross-disciplinary research, enabling our excellent specialisms to come together and optimise their joint impact.” Price distinguished cross-disciplinarity – "between experts in different disciplines, transcending subject boundaries" – from "interdiciplinary generalism".[25] The Times Higher Education article stated: "Cross-disciplinary collaboration did not necessarily happen "naturally", and this was where Professor Price's office justified its existence - by organising symposia, offering seed funding and even establishing cross-disciplinary institutes. "Some universities believe that just having excellence and enough people together [means] it will all happen. I believe excellence is a key thing, but you need also to give people a framework...to refer back to," he said. He said his approach was not "dirigiste", but that he hoped to create an ethos of collegiality in which collaboration became the norm. … "I am very happy to leave excellent people to get on alone, but we are providing them with an opportunity to do more." This was an opportunity that increasing numbers of UCL academics were taking up".[26]

Price instituted pan-institutional research themes, relevant across disciplinary boundaries, in order to facilitate cross-disciplinary community-building and collaboration.[27] He further enhanced UCL's cross-disciplinary capability by facilitating the foundation of thematic centres and networks, each bringing together a variety subject-specific expertise in order to address major problems with more sophistication. These included the UCL Computational Life & Medical Sciences Network, the UCL Centre for Digital Humanities, the UCL Energy Institute, the UCL Environment Institute, the UCL European Institute, the UCL Genetics Institute, the UCL Institute for Global Health, the UCL Institute of Origins, the UCL Institute for Risk & Disaster Reduction, UCL Systems Biology and the UCL Urban Laboratory.[28]

Price also conceived the UCL Grand Challenges – Global Health, Sustainable Cities, Intercultural Interaction and Human Wellbeing – through which concentrations of specialist expertise are brought together to address aspects of the world's key problems.[29] The following were flagship UCL Grand Challenges initiatives:

In contrast to the utilitarian Grand Challenges, Price also developed UCL Research Frontiers "to empower research leaders to develop and test novel ideas: where the primary justification for the enquiry is human curiosity; in subjects where cross-disciplinary input adds value to the investigation; and where the results do not necessarily have any immediate application".[40] The Times Higher Education noted: "UCL's research strategy will also see cross-disciplinary approaches extended to the curiosity-driven realm, with the adoption of up to 12 institutional "research frontiers", the first three of which will be the origins of life, human evolution and the dynamics of civilisation. Again, a variety of central coordination and support will be available, and Professor Price hopes to raise any necessary seed funding from philanthropic sources, with whom such ambitious endeavours "resonate"."[26]

Impact

Price advocated a reconceptualisation – and reclamation by universities – of the term ‘impact’, which he claimed had been degraded by government and UK research councils.[41] He envisioned UCL research impact being achieved though six broad channels: scholarly outputs, education, public engagement, social and commercial enterprise, translational research and public policy.[25]

As UCL Vice-Provost (Research), Price is responsible for:

Research policy

Price has advocated higher education policy reforms, including:

References

  1. ‘PRICE, Prof. (Geoffrey) David’, Who's Who 2013, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2013; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2012 ; online edn, Nov 2012 accessed 28 Sept 2013
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 "Professor David Price CV" (PDF). UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  3. "UCL". Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  4. "UCL Research". UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  5. 1 2 "UCL Annual Review 2010" (PDF). UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  6. "RAE 2008: Quality profiles". HEFCE. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  7. "Professor David Price – Vice-Provost (Research)". UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  8. "Professor David Price, UCL Vice-Provost (Research)". UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  9. "UCL Vice-Provost (Research) appointed". UCL News. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  10. "Appointment of new non-executive director Professor G David Price". The North Middlesex University Hospital Trust. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  11. "REF2014 panel membership". HEFCE. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  12. "Welcome from the Chair of Governors". UCL Academy. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  13. "AGU Fellows". AGU. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  14. "Directory of members as at June 2010" (PDF). Academia Europaea.
  15. "Fellows list". MSA. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  16. "Louis Néel Medal". EGU. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  17. "Top 10 British Geologists". Independent on Sunday. 10 August 2003.
  18. "Murchison Medal". GSL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  19. "Mineralogical Society - Schlumberger Medal". Mineralogical Society. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  20. "Full cast and crew for "Earth: The Power of the Planet"". IMDb. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  21. "Main Panel E" (PDF). Research Assessment Exercise. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  22. "Physics and Chemistry of Minerals Editorial Board". Springer. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  23. "Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors Editorial Board". Elsevier. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  24. "Maximising Impact and Influence Globally" (PDF). UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  25. 1 2 3 4 5 "Delivering a Culture of Wisdom: The 2011 UCL Research Strategy" (PDF). UCL.
  26. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Jump, Paul. "Renaissance man's word to the wise". Times Higher Education. Retrieved 7 February 2012.
  27. "UCL IRIS Research Themes". UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  28. "UCL Academic Structure and Partnerships". UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  29. "UCL Grand Challenges". UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  30. "UCL Population Footprints". UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  31. "Managing the health effects of climate change". The Lancet. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  32. "Sustainability and the Megalopolis: Facing the urban reality of the 21st century" (PDF). UCL Environment Institute. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  33. "UCL Global Migration Symposia Series". UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  34. "UCL Migration Week". UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  35. "UCL Early Modern Exchanges". UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  36. "UCL Institute for Human Rights". UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  37. "UCL European Institute".
  38. "The Future of Healthcare in Europe". UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  39. "Literature, Welfare and Wellbeing: The poetics of the Scandinavian welfare state". UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  40. http://www.ucl.ac.uk/research-frontiers/
  41. 1 2 Price, David. "The secret to saving our universities". Times Higher Education. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  42. "UCL Discovery". UCL. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  43. "UCL Press". UCL. Retrieved 11 February 2016.
  44. "UCL Public Policy". Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  45. Price, David (24 May 2011). "Research funding should reward excellence". London: Guardian Higher Education Network.
  46. Price, David. "The case for research collaboration". UCL News. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  47. Price, David; Stephen Caddick. "How to stay on top". Times Higher Education. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  48. Cook, Chris. "http://cachef.ft.com/cms/s/0/463eb064-c759-11df-aeb1-Research 'treadmill' under attack". Financial Times. Retrieved 6 December 2011. External link in |title= (help)
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