Battle of Ideas

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Battle of Ideas, a project of the Institute of Ideas, part of the LM network

The Battle of Ideas is a project of the Institute of Ideas, which is associated with the libertarian, anti-environmental LM network.

It commenced in 2005 [1] and is an annual two-day debating event held in London. It claims it "makes virtues of free-thinking and lively exchanges of views" and "fosters an atmosphere of intellectual freedom and open-ended exploration of new ideas, research and social trends".[2] In practice, all of the sessions' chairs, around half of the speakers and most of those selected by the chair to contribute from the floor are LM associates. In response to the question, "Is the Institute of Ideas committed to promoting debate or to promoting one side of a debate?", Claire Fox replied "We are committed to debating in general, but make it perfectly clear that we have a position in the debates we organise." [3] Accounts by attendees are here. [4][5][6]

LM network resources

Funding

Associated sponsors

Other multi-year sponsors, other LM network entities excluded, are:


During the four years 2007/8 to 2010/11, the Battle of Ideas and its partner organisation, Debating Matters, received £330,000 of public funds from the Economic and Science Research Council, the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and the Medical Research Council.


Battle of Ideas banner noting the funding of the LM network by pharma giant Pfizer, BT and Rupert Murdoch's newspaper The Times.


2005

[7]

2006

[8]

2007

BT | Pfizer | Economic and Social Research Council | Royal College of Art | Science champion Science and Technology Facilities Council | Education champion General Teaching Council for England | Design & architecture champion BDP | Arts champion Arts & Business | Film & animation champion Tiscali

Other partners

18 Doughty Street | Academics For Academic Freedom | Bishopsgate Institute | Blueprint | Body & Soul | Boisdale & La Bodeguita del Medio | Brighton Salon | British Council India | Centre for African Policy and Peace Strategy | Continuum | cScape | Culture Wars | Design Museum | engaging cogs | ESRC Britain Today | ESRC Genomics Network | European Dana Alliance for the Brain | FORA.tv | Friction.tv | Future Cities Project | Grange Hotels | Institute of Ideas & Pfizer Debating Matters Competition | IoI Book Club | IoI Education Forum | IoI Parents Forum | IoI Postgraduate Forum | IoI Science & Health Forum | ISM Music Journal | London Knowledge Lab | Manifesto Club | Novo magazine | NY Salon | Reading Agency | Royal Academy of Dance | Royal College of Art Animation Department | Royal College of Art Students' Union | Royal College of Music | Social Affairs Unit | Society for the Promotion of New Music | Sovereignty and Its Discontents | Spiked | WORLDwrite [9]

2008

[10]

2009

[11]

2010

2011

[13]

In March 2011, the Wellcome Trust made a 'Strategic Award' of £875,000 over five years to support "debates about developments in biomedicine"; specifically the Battle of Ideas and Debating Matters. [14]

Speakers

2015

Battle of Ideas speakers for the 2015 conference, as listed on the website in November 2016, were:[15]

  • David Aaronovitch - columnist, The Times; author, Voodoo Histories; chair, Index on Censorship
  • Tim Abrahams - co-publisher, Machine Books
  • Gilbert Achcar - professor of development studies and international relations; chair of Centre for Palestine Studies, SOAS, University of London
  • Abhay Adhikari - innovation consultant and strategist; founder, Digital Identity
  • Sam Adlen - head of business innovation, Satellite Applications Catapult
  • Andrew Adonis - Labour peer; author, 5 Days in May: The Coalition and Beyond
  • Nicole Agba - Autocar Next Generation Award 2014 Winner
  • Jobeda Ali - CEO, Three Sisters Care
  • Shahrar Ali - deputy leader, Green Party
  • Stuart Allan - professor of journalism and communication, Cardiff University; co-author, Digital War Reporting
  • Duleep Allirajah - sports columnist, spiked; Crystal Palace fan
  • Merris Amos - reader in human rights law, Queen Mary University of London
  • Anthony Anaxagorou - poet, writer, performer and educator
  • Dr Frankie Anderson - psychiatry trainee; co-founder, Sheffield Salon
  • Bea Appleby - editor, The Female Lead
  • Josie Appleton - director, civil liberties group, Manifesto Club; author, Officious: Rise of the Busybody State
  • Alexandra Archetti Stølen - festival director, Oslo World Music Festival; president, European Forum of Worldwide Music Festivals
  • Dr Eugenia Arsenis - director; dramaturg, Center for Contemporary Opera, New York
  • Dr Julian Baggini - founding editor, the Philosophers' Magazine; author, Freedom Regained: the possibility of free will and The Edge of Reason: A Rational Skeptic in an Irrational World
  • Tom Bailey - journalist; contributor, World Finance, European CEO, and The New Economy.
  • P Balaji - director - regulatory, external affairs and CSR, Vodafone India
  • Ros Ball - journalist; author, The Gender Police: a diary
  • Emily Barley - chairman, Conservatives for Liberty
  • Dr Graham Barnfield - senior lecturer in journalism, University of East London
  • Jenny Barrett - reader in film studies and popular culture, Edge Hill University
  • Leela Barrock - group head, group communications & corporate affairs, Malaysia-based multinational, Sime Darby Berhad
  • James Bartholomew - writer and journalist; author, The Welfare of Nations
  • Kalsoom Bashir - co-director, Inspire, an NGO working to counter extremism and gender inequality
  • Dr Tinneke Beeckman - independent philosopher; writer; columnist, De Standaard
  • Sean Bell - secretary and founder member, The Brighton Salon; copy-editor, writer and journalist
  • Simon Belt - IT consultant; coordinator, Manchester Salon
  • Dr Agiatis Benardou - senior research associate, ATHENA Research Centre
  • Dr Piers Benn - philosopher; author, Commitment and Ethics; visiting lecturer in ethics, Heythrop College, London and Fordham University, New York
  • Robert Bevan - writer; heritage consultant; architecture critic for the London Evening Standard; author, The Destruction of Memory: architecture at war
  • Paul Bew - crossbench peer; professor of politics, Queen's University Belfast; formerly, historical adviser to Northern Ireland’s Bloody Sunday Tribunals
  • Julie Bindel - journalist, author, broadcaster and feminist activist; research fellow, Lincoln University
  • Mark Birbeck - internet software and big data consultant
  • Jonathan Birdwell - head of policy and research, Institute for Strategic Dialogue
  • Helen Birtwistle - history and politics teacher, South London school
  • Bill Biss - editor, STAND Fanzine
  • Dr Tim Black - editor, Spiked Review
  • John David Blake - history practitioner, Harris Federation
  • Cara Bleiman - teacher, Arnhem Wharf Primary School
  • Daisy Blench - policy manager - alcohol policy and responsibility, British Beer & Pub Association
  • Linda Blum - associate professor of sociology, Northeastern University, Boston
  • Laura Blumenthal- Conservative Party Councillor, Wokingham Borough Council
  • Allum Bokhari - columnist, Breitbart
  • Sylvia Borren - executive director, Greenpeace Netherlands
  • Sumantra Bose - professor of international and comparative politics, London School of Economics
  • Professor Mike Boulton - professor of psychology, University of Chester; researcher, bully-victim relationships and psychological well-being
  • David Bowden - associate fellow, Institute of Ideas; culture writer
  • Shaun Breslin - professor of international politics, University of Warwick; associate fellow, Chatham House Asia Programme, Royal Institute of International Affairs
  • Justine Brian - director, Debating Matters Competition
  • Jennie Bristow - senior lecturer in sociology, Canterbury Christ Church University; author, The Sociology of Generations: New directions and challenges and Baby Boomers and Generational Conflict; co-author, Parenting Culture Studies
  • Jamie Bristow - director, The Mindfulness Initiative
  • Justin Bronk - research analyst, military sciences, RUSI; assistant editor, RUSI Defence Systems online journal
  • Amy Brown - associate professor in public health, Swansea University; researcher into breastfeeding
  • Dr Katrina Brown - director, The Common Guild
  • Cressida Brown - artistic director, Offstage Theatre; conceived, curated and directed Walking The Tightrope: the tension between Art and Politics
  • Jon Bryan - regional support official, University and College Union (UCU); treasurer, The Great Debate
  • Lyndsay Burtonshaw - activities officer, Sussex University Student Union
  • Jim Butcher - reader in geography of tourism, Canterbury Christ Church University; co-author, Volunteer Tourism: the lifestyle politics of international development
  • Nadia Butt - national coordinator, Debating Matters Competition, Institute of Ideas
  • Michael Caines - assistant editor, Times Literary Supplement
  • Dr James Campbell - lecturer in American History, University of Leicester; author, Crime and Punishment in African American History
  • Professor Ted Cantle, CBE - director, Institute of Community Cohesion (iCoCo); chair, Community Cohesion Review
  • Dr Nessa Carey - international director, PraxisUnico; author, The Epigenetics Revolution
  • Alvin Carpio - board member, UpRising
  • Emma Carr - director, Big Brother Watch
  • Ana Castro - graphic designer; CEO, Circus Network
  • Saimo Chahal QC (hon) - partner; joint head, Public Law & Human Rights, Bindmans LLP
  • Tom Chance - housing spokesperson, Green Party
  • David Chandler - professor of international relations, University of Westminster; author, Resilience: the Governance of Complexity
  • JJ Charlesworth - senior editor, ArtReview
  • Jonathan Charley - director of cultural studies, Department of Architecture at the University of Strathclyde
  • Dr Tom Chatfield - writer and broadcaster; author, Live This Book! and How to Thrive in the Digital Age
  • Daisy Christodoulou - research and development director, Ark Schools; author, Seven Myths about Education; season ticket holder, West Ham
  • Dimitris Christopoulos - vice president, International Federation for Human Rights
  • Ruth Cigman - senior research fellow in philosophy of education, University College London Institute of Education
  • Professor Nigel Clark - chair, human geography, Lancaster University
  • Simon Clark - director, smokers’ rights group, Forest; Action on Consumer Choice.
  • Dave Clements - adviser to local government; blogger, Guardian, Huffington Post; convenor, IoI Social Policy Forum.
  • Dr Robert Clowes - chair, Mind & Cognition Group, Nova Institute of Philosophy, Lisbon University; chair, Lisbon Salon
  • Joel Cohen - communications manager, BeyondMe
  • Christopher Coker - professor of international relations, LSE; books include Future War and Can War Be Eliminated?
  • Isobel Colchester - chief executive, Poet in the City
  • Glenda Cooper - lecturer in journalism, City University London; co-editor, Humanitarianism, Communications and Change
  • Frances Coppola - associate editor, Pieria; contributor to Nesta’s Our Work Here is Done, exploring the frontiers of robot technology
  • Nick Corston - co-founder, STEAM Co, set up to power communities to inspire children with creativity across the STEAM skills of Science, Tech, Engineering, Art and Maths
  • Madalena Corte-Real - sociologist , FAS – Fundo de Arquitectura Social
  • Ed Cottingham - media analyst and researcher
  • Dr Mark Coulson - reader and associate professor of psychology, Middlesex University; contributor, The video game debate and Online worlds: Convergence of the real and the virtual
  • John Coventry - global communications director, Change.org
  • Teresa Cremin - professor of education (literacy), Open University; trustee, UK Literacy Association; board member, Booktrust
  • Shane Croucher - senior writer, International Business Times
  • Niall Crowley - freelance designer and writer
  • Rosamund Cuckston - organiser, Birmingham Salon; lead singer, Pram
  • Dolan Cummings - associate fellow, Institute of Ideas; author, That Existential Leap: a crime story (forthcoming from Zero Books)
  • Dr Philip Cunliffe - senior lecturer in international conflict, University of Kent; co-editor, Politics Without Sovereignty: a critique of contemporary international relations.
  • Barry Curtis - Volunteer and writer
  • Lesley Curwen - business, economics and personal finance journalist, BBC; writer and speaker
  • Helen Czerski - physicist, oceanographer and broadcaster
  • Kenneth Dahlgren - head of social sciences, Rodeo Arkitekter AS
  • Sue Daley - head of big data, cloud and mobile, techUK
  • Kimon Daltas - editor, Classical Music magazine
  • Jeremy Dalton - innovation consultant, PwC
  • Anas Darkaoui - programme manager, Asfari Foundation
  • Martin Daubney - award-wining editor, journalist, and broadcaster; columnist for Telegraph Men
  • Neil Davenport - sociology and politics teacher; writer on culture; former music journalist
  • Rose Davis - intern, Institute of Ideas
  • Chrissie Daz - schoolteacher; cabaret performer; author on transgender and gender variant identity
  • Amali de Alwis - CEO, Code First: Girls
  • Alex Deane - managing director, FTI Consulting; Sky News regular; BBC Dateline London panellist; author Big Brother Watch: The state of civil liberties in modern Britain
  • Dr Katerina Deligiorgi - reader in philosophy, University of Sussex; author, The Scope of Autonomy
  • Dr Shirley Dent - communications specialist (currently working with the British Veterinary Association media team); editor, tlfw.co.uk; author, Radical Blake
  • Emma Dent-Coad - planning spokesperson, Labour Group, Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea Council; design and architecture journalist
  • Nadia Denton - film industry specialist; author, The Nigerian Filmmaker’s Guide to Success: beyond Nollywood
  • Paul Dickinson - executive chairman, CDP, driving sustainable economies
  • Betsy Dillner - director, Generation Rent
  • Ceri Dingle - director, WORLDwrite & WORLDbytes
  • Emily Dinsmore - project administrator, Physics Factory
  • Mar Dixon - creator, MuseomixUK and MuseumCamp
  • Laura Dodsworth - photographer; author, Bare Reality: 100 women, their breasts, their stories
  • Alastair Donald - associate director, Future Cities Project; architecture programme manager, British Council
  • Ian Douglas - journalist, Telegraph
  • Ashley Dove-Jay - aerospace engineer; popular science writer; Urban Spaceman columnist, Bristol Post
  • Andrew Doyle - stand-up comedian; playwright
  • Ruth Dudley Edwards - historian and journalist; author, The Seven: the lives and legacies of the founding fathers of the Irish Republic (forthcoming)
  • Ian Dunt - editor, Politics.co.uk; political editor, Erotic Review
  • Martin Durkin - CEO, Wag TV
  • Professor Bill Durodié - head of department and chair of international relations, University of Bath
  • Dr Wendy Earle - impact development officer, Birkbeck, University of London; convenor, Institute of Ideas Arts and Society Forum
  • Kathryn Ecclestone - professor of education, University of Sheffield; author, Governing Vulnerable Subjects in a Therapeutic Age (forthcoming)
  • Susan Edwards - dean of law, University of Buckingham
  • Kajsa Ekis Ekman - Swedish journalist, writer and activist; author, Skulden - eurokrisen sedd från Aten and Being and Being Bought; writer, Dagens Nyheter
  • Saja Elgredly - YAV Debater and Trainer (Egypt) Grad Student at City University London (UK) Culture Corner (Egypt)
  • Jonn Elledge - editor, CityMetric; writer, New Statesman
  • Rob Elsworth - policy analyst - climate and energy, Catholic Agency for Overseas Development (CAFOD)
  • Steven Erlanger - London bureau chief, New York Times
  • Dr Oliver Escobar - co-director, What Works Scotland; lecturer in public policy, University of Edinburgh
  • Mahan Esfahani - harpsichordist; BBC Music ‘Newcomer of the Year’ 2015
  • Raffaele Esposito - architect and urban designer, DRS / Glasgow City Council
  • Leo Evans - politics student, University of Liverpool; Liberal Democrat PPC for Liverpool Wavertree, 2015
  • Katie Evans - economist, Social Market Foundation
  • Craig Fairnington - associate fellow, Institute of Ideas; university finance and accommodation officer
  • Kishwer Falkner - Baroness Falkner of Margravine; chair, House of Lords EU Financial Affairs Sub-Committee; member, EU Select Committee
  • Dr Miguel Farias - reader in cognitive and biological psychology, Coventry University
  • Paul Farmer - chief executive, Mind
  • Alice Ferguson - director, Playing Out
  • George Ferguson, CBE - mayor of Bristol
  • Dr Eliza Filby - visiting lecturer in Modern British History, King’s College London; author, God and Mrs Thatcher: The battle for Britain’s soul
  • Justin Fisher - professor of political science and director of the Magna Carta Institute, Brunel University London
  • John Fitzpatrick - professor of law and director, Kent Law Clinic, University of Kent, Canterbury
  • Dr [Michael Fitzpatrick]] - writer on medicine and politics; author, The Tyranny of Health
  • Dr Susan Foister - deputy director and director of public engagement, National Gallery
  • Dr Katrina Forrester - lecturer in history of political thought, Queen Mary University of London
  • Oliver Foster - managing partner, Pagefield
  • Claire Fox - director, Institute of Ideas; panellist, BBC Radio 4's Moral Maze; author, I Find That Offensive
  • Cristiana Fragola - regional director for Europe & Middle East, 100 Resilient Cities
  • Dr Ashley Frawley - Senior lecturer in sociology and social policy, Swansea University; author, The Semiotics of Happiness: rhetorical beginnings of a public problem
  • Dr Liz Frayn - consultant psychiatrist, Devon Partnership Trust
  • Professor Elizabeth Frazer - head of department, Politics and International Relations, University of Oxford; fellow in politics, New College Oxford
  • Professor Monika Frommel - jurist; former director, criminological institute, Christian-Albrechts-University, Kiel
  • Professor Steve Fuller - Auguste Comte Chair in Social Epistemology, University of Warwick
  • Professor Frank Furedi - sociologist and social commentator; author, What's Happened to the University?, Power of Reading: from Socrates to Twitter, On Tolerance and Authority: a sociological history
  • John Gapper - columnist , Financial Times
  • Laia Gasch - special assistant to Deputy Mayor for Culture, Mayor's Office; chair of trustees, Chats Palace Arts Centre
  • Elisabetta Gasparoni - teacher; convenor of the Future Cities Project Readers’ Group
  • Dr Clare Gerada - GP; past chair, Royal College of General Practitioners
  • Jeanne-Marie Gescher - author, All Under Heaven: China’s Dreams of Order; speaker; adviser
  • Chrissie Giles - senior editor, Wellcome Trust; commissioning editor, Mosaic
  • Andrew Gimson - author and political journalist; contributing editor, ConservativeHome
  • Jodie Ginsberg - chief executive, Index on Censorship
  • Luke Gittos - criminal lawyer; director of City of London Appeals Clinic; legal editor at spiked; author, Why Rape Culture is a Dangerous Myth: From Steubenville to Ched Evans
  • Dr Daniel Glaser - director, Science Gallery London, King's College London
  • David Goodhart - director, Demos Integration Hub; author, The British Dream: successes and failures of post-war immigration
  • Harold Goodwin - professor of responsible tourism, Manchester Metropolitan University
  • Maria José Goulão - professor of art history, Faculty of Fine Arts, University of Porto
  • Manick Govinda - head, artists' advisory services; producer, Artsadmin; vice chair, a-n The Artists Information Company
  • Susan Grant-Muller - professor of technologies and informatics, Institute for Transport Studies, University of Leeds
  • Dr Maria Grasso - lecturer in politics and quantitative methods, Department of Politics, University of Sheffield; author: Generations, Political Participation and Social Change in Western Europe
  • Miranda Green - journalist; founding editor, The Day; regular contributor to BBC political shows; former Lib Dem spin doctor
  • Professor Trisha Greenhalgh - professor of primary care health sciences, University of Oxford
  • Ross Greer - head of campaigns and communications, Scottish Green Party
  • Sean Gregory - director, Creative Learning, Barbican/Guildhall School of Music & Drama
  • Phoebe Griffith - associate director, migration, integration and communities, IPPR
  • Tiago Guedes - director, Teatro Municipal do Porto
  • Dr Helene Guldberg - director, spiked; author, Reclaiming Childhood: freedom and play in an age of fear and Just Another Ape?
  • David Gurnham - associate professor in law, University of Southampton; author, Crime, Desire and Law’s Unconscious
  • Dr Chris Gyngell - research fellow, Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics
  • Barbara Hackenschmidt - member of Parliament Brandenburg (2004-2014) and again as of 1st November 2015.
  • Pauline Hadaway - writer and researcher
  • Dr Philip Hadfield - associate fellow, University of Leeds; author, Nightlife and Crime
  • Isobel Hadley-Kamptz - Swedish journalist; author, Frihet och fruktan: Tankar om en ny liberalism
  • Rania Hafez - programme leader, MA Education, Greenwich University; fellow, The Muslim Institute
  • Dr Lesley Hall - Wellcome Library Research Fellow
  • Ahmed Hamad - YAV Debater and Trainer (Jordan) Secretary of International Relations at University of Vaasa (Finland)
  • Philip Hammond - professor of media and communications, London South Bank University
  • Adnan Harambasic - architect; partner SAAHA
  • Lisa Harker - director of strategy, policy and evidence, NSPCC
  • Phineas Harper - deputy director, The Architecture Foundation
  • Sabrina Harris - technical author; longtime gamer; regular commentator on issues relating to freedom of speech and internet subcultures
  • Andrew Harrop - general secretary, Fabian Society; author, A Presumption of Equality; contributor, The Generation Game
  • Adrian Hart - author, That's Racist! How the regulation of speech and thought divides us all and Leave those kids alone – How official hate speech regulation interferes in school life
  • Dr Anna Hartnell - senior lecturer in contemporary literature, Birkbeck, University of London
  • Professor Dennis Hayes - professor of education, University of Derby
  • Dr Sudhir Hazareesingh - fellow and tutor in politics, Balliol College, Oxford; author, How the French Think: an affectionate portrait of an intellectual people
  • James Heartfield - writer and lecturer; co-author, Who’s Afraid of the Easter Rising?
  • Bríd Hehir - writer, researcher and traveller; retired nurse and fundraiser
  • Professor Magnus Henrekson - professor in economics and managing director of Swedish IFN (The Research Institute of Industrial Economics); author and public debater.
  • Barbara Hewson - barrister, Middle Temple; writer and commentator
  • Nancy Hey - director, What Works Centre for Wellbeing
  • Angie Hobbs - Professor of the Public Understanding of Philosophy, University of Sheffield
  • Christina Hoff Sommers - writer and resident scholar, American Enterprise Institute; host, weekly video series, The Factual Feminist
  • Jon Holbrook - barrister; writer on legal issues; regular contributor to spiked
  • Rosemary Hollis - professor of international politics and director of the Olive Tree Programme, City University London
  • Professor Alan Hudson - director of leadership and public policy programmes, University of Oxford; visiting professor, Shanghai Jiaotong University
  • George Hull - co-founder, Bloc; contributor, the Spectator
  • Mick Hume - editor-at-large, online magazine spiked; author, Trigger Warning: Is the Fear of Being Offensive Killing Free Speech?
  • Huw Humphreys - head of music, Barbican Centre
  • Dr Rupa Huq - Labour MP for Ealing Central and Acton
  • Dr Humeria Iqtidar - senior lecturer in politics, Department of Political Economy, King’s College London
  • Tracy Irish - Warwick Business School Shakespeare Scholar; author, The Shorter Shakespeare
  • Tom Ironside - director of business and regulation, British Retail Consortium
  • Helen Jamison - head of media relations, Wellcome Trust
  • Christopher Jamison - director, National office for vocation, Catholic Church of England and Wales; author, Finding Sanctuary and Finding Happiness; featured in BBC TV's The Monastery
  • Ana Jara - founding member and manager, ARTÉRIA – Humanizing Architecture
  • Sian Jarvis - managing director, Jarvis & Bo Communications; former director general of communications, Department of Health
  • Paul Jasper - consultant, Oxford Policy Management – a leading international development consultancy
  • Nitin Jayakrishnan - tech entrepreneur (Co-Founder of iTrucks PLC and LO/RE); student, Warwick Manufacturing Group, University of Warwick; alumnus, Debating Matters India
  • Leszek Jazdzewski - editor-in-chief, Polish liberal journal Liberté!
  • Vít Jedlička - president of Liberland
  • Dr Tiffany Jenkins - writer and broadcaster; author, Keeping Their Marbles: how treasures of the past ended up in museums and why they should stay there
  • Louise Johns-Shepherd - chief executive, Centre for Literacy in Primary Education
  • Dr Lucy Johnstone - consultant clinical psychologist, Cwm Taf Health Board, South Wales; author, A Straight Talking Guide to Psychiatric Diagnosis
  • Rachael Jolley - editor, Index on Censorship magazine
  • Lorien Jollye - vaping advocate, New Nicotine Alliance UK
  • Daniel Joseph - rector of Derby, Dean of East Midlands, Russian Orthodox Church; chaplain and lecturer in philosophy, University of Derby
  • Dr Thomas Karshan - lecturer in literature, University of East Anglia; author, Vladimir Nabokov and the Art of Play
  • Maja Kecman - design lead, HELIX, St Mary’s Hospital
  • Professor Mike Kelly - senior visiting fellow, Behaviour and Health Research Unit, Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge; researcher in nudge theory and choice architecture
  • Angus Kennedy - convenor, The Academy; author, Being Cultured: in defence of discrimination
  • Dr Peter Kent - immediate past president, ASCL; headteacher, Lawrence Sheriff School
  • Ashutosh Khandekar - editor, Opera Now
  • Aditi Khanna - senior correspondent, Press Trust of India; editor, India Inc.; president, Indian Journalists’ Association
  • Geoff Kidder - director, membership and events, Institute of Ideas; convenor, IoI Book Club; IoI’s resident expert in all sporting matters
  • Thomas Kielinger - UK correspondent, Die Welt
  • Rob Killick - CEO, Clerkswell; author, The UK After The Recession
  • Marie Kinsey - joint head of department, Journalism Studies, University of Sheffield
  • Matthew Kirk - group external affairs director, Vodafone
  • Lesley Klaff - senior lecturer in law, Sheffield Hallam University; associate editor, Journal for the Study of Antisemitism
  • Dr Simon Knight - senior youth work practitioner; vice chair, Play Scotland
  • Pius Knüsel - teacher; cultural editor and writer
  • Boris Kotchoubey - professor, University of Tübingen
  • Serena Kutchinsky - digital editor, Prospect
  • Dr Alexandra Lamont - senior lecturer, psychology of music, Keele University
  • Dr Sean Lang - senior lecturer in history, Anglia Ruskin University; director, Better History Forum
  • Nadia Latif - theatre director; credits include, Homegrown (NYT); Octagon (Arcola Theatre); Even Stillness Breathes Softly Against A Brick Wall (Soho Theatre)
  • Dr Shirley Lawes - researcher; consultant and university teacher, specialising in teacher education and modern foreign languages; Chevalier dans l’ordre des Palmes Académiques
  • Paul Lay - editor, History Today
  • Dr Ellie Lee - reader in social policy, University of Kent, Canterbury; director, Centre for Parenting Culture Studies
  • Philippe Legrain - visiting senior fellow, LSE’s European Institute; author, Immigrants: your country needs them and European Spring: Why Our Economies and Politics are in a Mess – and How to Put Them Right
  • Sam Leith - literary editor, Spectator; judge, Man Booker Prize 2015
  • Penny Lewis - lecturer, Scott Sutherland School of Architecture, Robert Gordon University; co-founder, AE Foundation
  • Richard Lewis - veteran games journalist
  • Dr Norman Lewis - director (innovation), PwC; co-author, Big Potatoes: the London manifesto for innovation
  • Rod Liddle - associate editor, Spectator; columnist, The Sunday Times; author, Selfish Whining Monkeys
  • Jonathan Liew - sportswriter, Telegraph
  • Mark Littlewood - director general, Institute of Economic Affairs
  • Peter Lloyd - freelance journalist; author, Stand By Your Manhood
  • Daniel Lloyd - consumer lawyer; member of the employed bar; co-author, Blackstone's Guide to the Consumer Rights Act 2015 (forthcoming)
  • Diogo Seixas Lopes - partner, Barbas Lopes Arquitectos
  • Jonathan Lundqvist - president, Reporters Without Borders Sweden; vice-president, RSF International
  • Rick Lyman - journalist; Central and Eastern European bureau chief, New York Times
  • Rob Lyons - science and technology director, Institute of Ideas; convenor, IoI Economy Forum
  • George MacDonald - executive editor, Retail Week
  • Leila MacTavish - head of initial teacher education, Future Training, Future Academies
  • Dr Jan Macvarish - associate lecturer and researcher, Centre for Parenting Culture Studies, University of Kent; author, Neuroparenting: The Expert Invasion of Family Life
  • Shiraz Maher - senior research fellow and head of outreach, International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation (ICSR), King's College London
  • John Mair - editor and journalism lecturer; co-editor, The BBC Today: future uncertain
  • Jakub Makowski - regional chair, Liberal Youth in the East of England
  • Amjad Malik - education consultant, The Nida Trust
  • Kate Maltby - theatre critic, The Times; associate fellow, Bright Blue; researcher on intellectual life of Elizabeth I
  • Lila Manioti - director of cultural affairs, Hellenic American Union
  • Maria Margaronis - writer and broadcaster, The Nation magazine
  • Toby Marshall - A Level Film Studies Teacher; PhD researcher in sociology of education, UCL Institute of Education
  • Carlos Martins - CEO, Opium lda
  • Jack Marwood - primary school teacher; education writer, Icing on the Cake blog
  • Nikola Matisic - opera singer and pedagogue; founder, Operalabb
  • Benita Matofska - chief sharer, Compare and Share; global sharing economy expert
  • Christian May - editor, City A.M.
  • Dr Catherine McCall - director, EPIC (the European Philosophical Inquiry Centre)
  • Amber McCleary - founding director, Copper Clothing
  • Dr Tara McCormack - lecturer in international politics, University of Leicester; author, Critique, Security and Power: the political limits to emancipatory approaches
  • Kevin McCullagh - founder, Plan
  • Nancy McDermott - writer; advisor to Park Slope Parents, NYC's most notorious parents' organization
  • Angela McFarlane - chief executive and registrar, The College of Teachers
  • Neil McGuire - designer and design tutor, Glasgow School of Art
  • Colin McInnes - James Watt Chair, Professor of Engineering Science, University of Glasgow
  • Dr Marie McIntyre - research associate, Department of Epidemiology & Population Health, Institute of Infection & Global Health, University of Liverpool
  • Dr Anthony McIntyre - author, Good Friday: the death of Irish Republicanism
  • Dr Ken McLaughlin - lecturer in social work; author, Surviving Identity: vulnerability and the psychology of recognition
  • David McNeill - director of public affairs and stakeholder engagement, Transport For London
  • James McVinnie - organist; latest release, Cycles
  • Anna Mdee - research fellow, Overseas Development Institute
  • Alp Mehmet - retired diplomat; vice-chairman, Migrationwatch UK
  • Dr Alexander Meleagrou-Hitchens - lecturer, King's College London; head of research, ICSR
  • Clare Melford - interim executive and organisational consultant; presenter, BBC Radio 4 Four Thought programme "Buddha in the Boardroom"
  • Kaitlynn Mendes - lecturer in media and communication, University of Leicester; author, SlutWalk: feminism, activism and media
  • Samar Samir Mezghanni - YAV Debater and Trainer (Tunisia) PhD Candidate at University of Cambridge (UK)
  • Professor Andy Miah - chair in science communication & digital media, University of Salford
  • Dr Ruth Mieschbuehler - programme leader, education studies, College of Education, University of Derby
  • Gia Milinovich - producer, broadcaster, professional dork
  • Sally Millard - co-founder, IoI Parents Forum
  • Carl Miller - research director, Centre for the Analysis of Social Media, Demos
  • Alan Miller - chairman, Night Time Industries Association (NTIA)
  • Beverley Milton-Edwards - professor of politics, Queen’s University Belfast; author, Muslim Brotherhood: the Arab Spring and its future face
  • Munira Mirza - advisor on arts and philanthropy; former deputy mayor of London for education and culture; author, The Politics of Culture: the case for universalism
  • Kevin Mole - associate professor (reader) and head of entrepreneurship and innovation, Warwick Business School, University of Warwick
  • Paul Moloney - trade union and industrial relations manager
  • Derek Molyneux - historian and writer
  • Anshuman Mondal - professor of English and Postcolonial Studies, Brunel University London; author, The Politics of Free Speech after Rushdie
  • Dr Jules Montague - consultant neurologist, Royal Free Hospital
  • Chris Moody - chief business development officer, Transport Systems Catapult
  • Rowan Moore - architecture critic, Observer; author, Why We Build
  • Christian Moos - secretary general, German Section of European Federalists
  • Juliette Morgan - C&W Tech Global Lead – London Head of Property – Tech City UK
  • Paul Morley - music journalist; author, The North (and almost everything in it)
  • Mark Morrin - research associate, ResPublica; co-author, Devo Max - Devo Manc
  • Daniel Moylan - former deputy chairman of Transport for London; Conservative Councillor; co-chairman, Urban Design London
  • Frank Mulder - researcher, writer and journalist; ; columnist, De Groene Amsterdammer; author, De geluksmachine (The Happiness Machine)
  • Para Mullan - senior project manager, Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development; FCIPD
  • Phil Mullan - economist and business manager; author, Creative Destruction: How to start an economic renaissance
  • Chris Muller - head, Sir William Perkins’s School
  • Annabel Mullin - PhD researcher, UCL Institute of Education; Lib Dem Parliamentary spokesperson for Kensington
  • Toby Mundy - founding director, TMA literary agency; executive director, Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction
  • Liam Murray - founder and owner, We Are Flat Five, a boutique management consultancy
  • Rupert Myers - barrister and writer
  • Jonathan Neame - chief executive, Shepherd Neame Ltd
  • Dr Kristian Niemietz - senior research fellow, Institute of Economic Affairs; author, A Patient Approach: putting the consumer at the heart of UK healthcare
  • Charles Nishikawa - management consultant, Across Associates Consultants; lecturer, Mejiro University
  • Jon Nixon - writer, Centre of International Education and Lifelong Learning, Hong Kong Institute of Education; author, Hannah Arendt and the politics of friendship; founding co-editor, Perspectives in Leadership in Higher Education
  • Ted Nordhaus - chairman, Breakthrough Institute
  • Peter North - reader in alternative economies, Department of Geography and Planning, University of Liverpool
  • Robin Norton-Hale - artistic director, OperaUpClose
  • Teresa Novais - partner, aNC arquitectos
  • Professor Fred Nyberg - senior professor in biological research on drug addiction, Department of Pharmaceutical Biosciences, Uppsala University
  • Margaret O’ Callaghan - historian and political analyst, Queens University of Belfast
  • Anthony O'Hear - professor of philosophy, University of Buckingham; editor, Philosophy; director, Royal Institute of Philosophy
  • Mohsen Ojja - principal, The Crest Academies
  • Kunle Olulode - director, Voice4Change England; creative director, Rebop Productions
  • Brendan O'Neill - editor, spiked; columnist, Big Issue; contributor, Spectator; author, A Duty to Offend: Selected Essays
  • Andrew Opie - director for food and sustainability, British Retail Consortium
  • Daniel O'Reilly - comedian, aka Dapper Laughs
  • Andrew Orlowski - executive editor, Register; assistant producer, All Watched Over By Machines Of Loving Grace
  • David Orr - chief executive, National Housing Federation
  • Sulaiman Osman - writer, blogger and political activist
  • Ann Overbergh - programmer, Dutch-Flemish House deBuren
  • Michael Owens - commercial director, Bow Arts Trust; owner, London Urban Visits; formerly, head of development policy, London Development Agency
  • Adrian Pabst - senior lecturer in politics, University of Kent
  • Danni Paffard - divestment campaigner, 350.org
  • Dr James Panton - head of politics, Magdalen College School, Oxford; associate lecturer in politics and philosophy, Open University; co-founder, Manifesto Club
  • Lefteris Papagiannakis - member, Athens municipal council; president; Immigrant Integration Council
  • Eva Pascoe - chair, digital network Cybersalon; co-founder, Cyberia, world’s first internet café; co-author, An Alternative Future High Street for the UK minister for high streets
  • Bénédicte Paviot - U.K. correspondent, France 24; regular contributor to news and current affairs programmes, BBC TV & Radio, Sky News, LBC and other UK and overseas outlets
  • Laurie Penny - journalist; contributing editor, New Statesman; author, Unspeakable Things: sex, lies and revolution
  • Luis T Pereira - founding partner, [A] ainda arquitectura architecture studio, Porto
  • Shyama Perera - writer, broadcaster and novelist; acting director, One World Media
  • David Perks - founder and principal, East London Science School; director, the Physics Factory
  • Martyn Perks - digital business consultant and writer; co-author, Big Potatoes: the London manifesto for innovation
  • Stephen Plaice - librettist; writer in residence, Guildhall School of Music and Drama
  • Jeannette Pols - professor of social theory, humanism and materialities, University of Amsterdam
  • Martin Powell - global head of urban development, Siemens Plc
  • Dr Weronika Priesmeyer-Tkocz - programme director, European Academy Berlin
  • Vicky Pryce - board member, Centre for Economics and Business Research; economic advisor, British Chamber of Commerce
  • Dr Vanessa Pupavac - associate professor; co-director of the Centre for the Study of Social and Global Justice, University of Nottingham
  • Jamie Ratcliff - assistant director, Programme, Policy and Services, Greater London Authority
  • Adam Rawcliffe - partnerships manager, Institute of Ideas
  • Helen Reece - reader in law, LSE
  • Dr Paul Reeves - engineering software designer, SolidWorks R&D (part of Dassault Systèmes); convener, manufacturing work group for Big Potatoes: the London manifesto for innovation
  • Abdul Rehman-Malik - journalist; programmes manager, Radical Middle Way
  • Alex Renton - award-winning journalist; writer on food and food policy; author, Planet Carnivore: how cheap meat costs the earth
  • Jacob Reynolds - consultant, SHM Productions
  • Martin Robinson - educational consultant and teacher; author, Trivium 21c: preparing young people for the future with lessons from the past; writer, Times Educational Supplement
  • Carolyn Robson - executive headteacher, Rushey Mead School, Leicester; CEO, Rushey Mead Educational Trust
  • Alex Rogers - professor in conservation biology, Somerville College, University of Oxford; scientific director, International Programme on State of the Ocean (IPSO)
  • Kevin Rooney - politics teacher and head of social science, Queen's School, Bushey; co-author, Who's Afraid Of The Easter Rising?
  • Nick Rose - teacher; leading practitioner in psychology and research; shortlisted TES Teacher Blogger of the Year
  • Dr Joel Nathan Rosen - associate professor of sociology, Moravian College; co-author, Black Baseball, Black Business: race enterprise and the fate of the segregated dollar; author, The Erosion of the American Sporting Ethos: Shifting Attitudes Toward Competition
  • Aoife Rosenmeyer - freelance critic; contributing editor, Art in America & Art Agenda
  • Nick Ross - broadcaster; visiting professor, University College London
  • Dr Martin Roth - director, Victoria and Albert Museum
  • Nathalie Rothschild - freelance journalist; producer and reporter for Sweden's public service radio
  • Maisie Rowe - landscape architect, writer and illustrator
  • Phil Rumney - professor of criminal justice, Bristol Law School, UWE; co-author, Understanding and Responding to Sexual Violence: a multi-disciplinary approach (forthcoming)
  • Dr Tamara Russell - clinical psychologist; director, Mindfulness Centre of Excellence, London; visiting lecturer, King’s College London
  • Kiernan Ryan - professor of English language and literature, Royal Holloway, University of London; author, Shakespeare’s Universality: here’s fine revolution
  • Angela Saini - science journalist; author, Geek Nation: how Indian science is taking over the world
  • Hilary Salt - actuary; founder, First Actuarial
  • Yunas Samad - professor of South Asian studies, University of Bradford
  • Peter Sammonds - professor of geophysics, University College London; director, UCL Institute for Risk and Disaster Reduction
  • Jane Sandeman - convenor, IoI Parents Forum; contributor, Standing up to Supernanny; director of finance and central services, Cardinal Hume Centre
  • Dr Michael Savage - blogger, Grumpy Art Historian
  • Dr Helen Scales - freelance writer and broadcaster; author, Spirals in Time: the secret life and curious afterlife of seashells
  • Professor Giaco Schiesser - vice-president & board member; University of the Arts, Zurich
  • Jonathan Schofield - editor-at-large, Manchester Confidential; editor, Manchester Books Limited
  • Bauke Schram - business reporter, International Business Times UK
  • Dr Patrik Schumacher - principal, Zaha Hadid Architects; author, The Autopoiesis of Architecture
  • Matthew Scott - barrister, Pump Court Chambers; blogs at www.barristerblogger.com, shortlisted for The Comment Awards "Best independent blog" 2015
  • Laurence Scott - lecturer in English and creative writing, Arcadia University; author, The Four-Dimensional Human: ways of being in the digital world (winner of Royal Society of Literature Jerwood Award for 2014)
  • Paul Seaman - co-founder, Zurich Salon; editor, 21st Century PR Issues
  • Professor John Seddon - leader of the Vanguard organisations; visiting professor, Hull University Business School
  • Fredrik Segerfeldt - writer; author, Den nya jämlikheten : global utveckling från Robin Hood till Botswana; co-founder, Migro
  • Alka Sehgal Cuthbert - educator, writer, doctoral researcher
  • Freddie Sehgal Cuthbert - student; contributor to spiked
  • Adam Seldon - co-director, Lauriston Lights, an education charity
  • Jack Self - contributing editor, Architectural Review; director, the REAL Foundation
  • Dr Sadhvi Sharma - researcher and writer on politics in India, development, and NGO campaigns
  • Karl Sharro - architect; writer; Middle East commentator; co-author, Manifesto: Towards a New Humanism in Architecture
  • Jeremy Sice - business and communications advisor, JS&A
  • Roxana Silbert - artistic director, Birmingham REP Theatre
  • Dr Hayaatun Sillem - director of programmes & fellowship, Royal Academy of Engineering
  • Lenore Skenazy - founder of the book, blog and movement Free-Range Kids; “America’s Worst Mom”
  • Alv Skogstad Aamo - architect; urbanist; partner,DARK architects
  • Dr Richard Smith - chair of trustees, ICDDR,B; former editor, British Medical Journal; chair, Patients Know Best
  • Jason Smith - associate fellow, Institute of Ideas
  • Jean Smith - specialist development consultant; co-founder and director, NY Salon
  • Karel Smouter - deputy editor, De Correspondent
  • Justin Smyth - librarian; co-founder, Dublin Salon
  • Christopher Snowdon - director, lifestyle economics, Institute of Economic Affairs; author, The Art of Suppression
  • Sonia Sodha - freelance policy analyst; Observer leader writer
  • Dr Nikos Sotirakopoulos - lecturer in sociology, University of Loughborough; author, The Rise of Lifestyle Activism: From New Left to Occupy
  • Thomas Soud - chair, Brighton Left
  • Barbara Speed - staff writer, CityMetric, New Statesman
  • Josh Spero - editor, Spear's magazine; art critic, Tatler; author, Second-Hand Stories
  • Dr Alex Standish - senior lecturer in geography education, University College London/Institute of Education
  • Dr Dominic Standish - author, Venice in Environmental Peril? Myth and Reality; lecturer, University of Iowa's CIMBA campus, Venice
  • Dr Ben Stanley - lecturer, Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, SWPS University in Warsaw
  • Sandy Starr - communications officer, Progress Educational Trust; webmaster, BioNews
  • Susan Steed - economist and aspiring stand up comedian
  • Duncan Stephenson - director of external affairs, Royal Society for Public Health
  • Dr Jack Stilgoe - senior lecturer in science and technology policy, University College London; author, Experiment Earth: responsible innovation in geoengineering
  • Dr Melvyn Stokes - professor of film history, University College London; author, The Birth of a Nation: a history of the most controversial motion picture of all time and American History through Hollywood Film: from the Revolution to the 1960s
  • Sarah Strang - founder, CIVIC ROOM
  • Keith Stuart - video games editor, Guardian
  • Keith Sullivan - retired educational psychologist and university professor, National University of Ireland; author, The Anti-Bullying Handbook
  • Gabriella Swallow - cellist, broadcaster and arts commentator
  • Richard Swan - writer and academic
  • Isabelle Szmigin - professor of marketing, University of Birmingham; author, Understanding the Consumer
  • Amin Taha - architect, Amin Taha Architects and Group Work; jury member, RIBA’s National Awards and Stirling Shortlist
  • André Tavares - chief curator, Lisbon Architecture Triennale
  • Dr Mark Taylor - vice principal, East London Science School; London convenor, IoI Education Forum
  • The Revd Canon Dr Simon Taylor - canon chancellor; Derby Cathedral
  • Peter Taylor - award winning reporter, BBC; documentaries include Provos, Loyalists , Brits and Generation Jihad; author, Talking to Terrorists: face to face with the enemy
  • Güneş Taylor - stem cell researcher, University of Oxford
  • Dr Funda Tekin - senior researcher, Institut für Europäische Politik
  • Jemima Thackray - journalist, Telegraph and Church Times; founder, UK’s first mums' chaplaincy service; soon-to-be trainee priest, Church of England
  • Paul Thomas - professor of youth & policy and director of research, University of Huddersfield; author, Responding to the Threat of Violent Extremism: failing to prevent
  • Paul Thomas - civil servant; qualified FE teacher; organiser, Leeds Salon
  • Matt Thomson - head of planning, Campaign to Protect Rural England
  • Leonora Thomson - director of audiences and development, Barbican Centre
  • Anne Torreggiani - chief executive, The Audience Agency
  • Lida Tsene - head of public relations, art and educational programs, Comicdom Press
  • Colin Tweedy - chief executive, The Building Centre Trust; formerly chief executive, Arts & Business
  • Menelaos Tzafalias - freelance journalist and producer based in Athens
  • Jake Unsworth - trainee solicitor, Bond Dickinson; convenor, Debating Matters Ambassadors
  • Daniella van Dijk-Wennberg - head of Interkulturelt Museum, Oslo Museum
  • Liesbeth van Tongeren - member of parliament, GroenLinks
  • Joana Varajão - architect, RA\\ Architecture & Design Studio
  • Georgios Varouxakis - professor of the history of political thought, Queen Mary University of London; author, Mill on Nationality
  • Nikos Vatopoulos - arts editor and columnist, Kathimerini
  • Annie Vernon - Olympic silver medallist and two-time World Champion rower; journalist and speaker
  • Marco Visscher - journalist; curator, Tegengeluid
  • Ignacio Vita - lawyer specialising in migration law, EC law and right of asylum
  • Dr Stuart Waiton - lecturer in sociology and criminology, Abertay University; author, Snobs' Law: criminalising football fans in an age of intolerance
  • Philip Waldron - district minister for Merseyside, Unitarian Church
  • Brendan Walsh - literary editor, The Tablet
  • Jason Walsh - journalist; foreign correspondent, CS Monitor
  • Philip Walters - chair, Rising Stars (educational publisher), and the GL Education Group; Spurs season ticket holder; member of Middlesex County Cricket Club
  • Stuart Walton - cultural historian, novelist and critic; author, A Natural History of Human Emotions and The Realm of the Senses: a materialist theory of seeing and feeling
  • Annie Warburton - creative director, Crafts Council
  • Bruno Waterfield - Brussels correspondent, The Times; co-author, No Means No
  • Dr Keon West - social psychologist & lecturer, Goldsmiths, University of London
  • Helen Whately - member of parliament for Faversham and Mid Kent
  • Ella Whelan - assistant editor, spiked
  • Myles Wickstead - visiting professor (international relations), Open University and King’s College London; coordinator, Aid and Development: a brief introduction
  • Dr Steve Wiggins - research fellow, Overseas Development Institute, London
  • Simon Wilde - science and health communicator
  • Dr Joanna Williams - academic; author, Academic Freedom in an Age of Conformity; education editor, spiked
  • Peter D Williams - executive officer, Right To Life
  • Austin Williams - associate professor in architecture, XJTLU University, Suzhou, China; director, Future Cities Project; convenor, Bookshop Barnies; founding member of New Narratives
  • Dr Glynne Williams - senior lecturer in industrial relations, University of Leicester
  • Jane Wills - professor of human geography, Queen Mary University of London
  • Ruth Wishart - columnist, Herald; board member, Creative Scotland
  • David Wood - chair, London Futurists
  • Chris Woods - director, Airwars.org; author, Sudden Justice: America’s secret drone wars
  • Peter Worley - CEO and co-founder, The Philosophy Foundation
  • James Woudhuysen - visiting professor, London South Bank University
  • Professor Ian Wright - director, Science and Technology Directorate, National Oceanography Centre
  • Martin Wright - writer, editor and adviser on environmental solutions and sustainable futures
  • Mike Wright - executive director, Jaguar Land Rover
  • Milo Yiannopoulos - technology editor, Breitbart
  • Dagmawi Yimer - film-maker, AMM (Archive of Migrants' Memories)
  • Raymond Yiu - composer; conductor; jazz pianist
  • Cathy Young - contributing editor, Reason magazine; author, Ceasefire! Why women and men must join forces to achieve true equality
  • Dr Kevin Yuill - senior lecturer, history, University of Sunderland; author, Assisted Suicide: the liberal, humanist case against legalization
  • Kathryn Yusoff - senior lecturer in geography, Queen Mary University of London; author, Anthropogenesis: Origins and Endings in the Anthropocene
  • Jan Zalasiewicz - professor of paleobiology, University of Leicester; chair, Anthropocene Working Group of the International Commission on Stratigraphy
  • Dr Paul Zanelli - chief technical officer, Transport Systems Catapult
  • Kolja Zydatiss - editor, NovoArgumente

2010

Battle of Ideas speakers for the 2010 conference, as listed on the website in April 2011, were:[16]

  • Beccy Allen, researcher, Hansard Society; project manager, HeadsUp, an online forum for 11-18’s, politicians and policy-makers.
  • Dave Clements, social policy writer; convenor, IoI Social Policy Forum; co-editor, The Future of Community.
  • Joel Cohen, politics student, SOAS; member, Battle of Ideas Committee
  • Dolan Cummings, convenor, Battle for Politics; associate fellow, Institute of Ideas; editor, Culture Wars.
  • Nick Dusic, director, Campaign for Science and Engineering (CaSE)
  • Tim Finch, director and head of migration, equalities and citizenship, IPPR
  • Claire Fox, director, Institute of Ideas; panellist, BBC Radio 4's Moral Maze
  • Frank Furedi, professor of sociology, University of Kent, Canterbury; author, Wasted, Politics of Fear, Where Have All the Intellectuals Gone?
  • Pam Giddy, director, Power 2010; co-founder and former director, Power Inquiry
  • Tony Gilland, science and society director, Institute of Ideas; director,Debating Matters Competition
  • Norman Ginsburg, professor of Social Policy, London Metropolitan University; author, Divisions of Welfare: A Critical Introduction to Comparative Social Policy
  • David Goodhart, founder and editor, Prospect magazine
  • David Green, director, Civitas; author, Individualists Who Co-operate: Education and welfare reform befitting a free people
  • Shane Greer, executive editor, Total Politics; political consultant and commentator
  • Matt Grist, director, RSA's Social Brain project; author, Changing the Subject - how new ways of thinking about human behaviour might change politics, policy and practice
  • Kamaljeet Jandu, national officer, Equality through Inclusion, GMB
  • Geoff Kidder, director, membership and events, Institute of Ideas; convenor, IoI Book Club; IoI’s resident expert in all sporting matters
  • George Lee, prospective parliamentary candidate, Conservative, Holborn & St Pancras; founding member, Black Police Association
  • Kirk Leech, freelance journalist; researcher, development and environment
  • Kevin Maguire, associate editor, Daily Mirror
  • Brendan O'Neill, editor, Spiked; author, Can I Recycle My Granny and 39 Other Eco-Dilemmas
  • Ben Page, chief executive, Ipsos MORI]; Editorial Board, International Journal of Market Research
  • James Panton, politics tutor at St John’s College, University of Oxford; co-founder, radical civil liberties campaigning group, the Manifesto Club
  • Jo Phillips, journalist, former spin doctor; co-author Why Vote – a guide for those who can't be bothered.
  • Mike Savage, professor of sociology, University of Manchester; Director, ESRC Centre for Research on Socio-Cultural Change; author, Culture, Class, Distinction
  • David Seymour, co-author Why Vote – a guide for those who can't be bothered; former political editor, Mirror Group, leader writer, Daily Mail; founder, Student Mirror
  • Gerry Stoker, professor, Politics and Governance, University of Southampton; director, Centre for Citizenship, Globalization and Governance; author, Why Politics Matters: making democracy work
  • Wes Streeting, president, National Union of Students (NUS)
  • Peter Tatchell, human rights campaigner; Green Party human rights spokesperson
  • Robin Walsh, editorial assistant, medical publishing company; co-founder, Current Affairs Forum.
  • Bruno Waterfield, Brussels correspondent, Daily Telegraph; author, No Means No!
  • Jeremy Webb, editor-in-chief, New Scientist
  • Richard Wilson, founder and director, Izwe; founder, leading public engagement think-tank, Involve

Contact

Address:
Phone:
Email:
Facebook: Battle of Ideas
Website: Battle of Ideas
YouTube: Battle of Ideas

Resources

Jon Alexander, Beware the Institute of Ideas Conservation-Economy, 1 Nov 2010
Jenny Turner, 'Who Are They?,' London Review of Books, 8 July 2010
Helge Ogrim, Battle of Ideas, Is the Revolutionary Communist Party still the vanguard? November 6, 2010 · 11:49 am
Press Gazette, The Battle of Ideas: It's a twisted old battlefield Press Gazette, 3 November 2006
Richard Wilson, 'Quite contrary:inside the Battle of Ideas', New Humanist, Jan/Feb 2011

Notes

  1. Culture Wars History, Culture Wars website, accessed 31 Oct 2010
  2. About: What is the Battle of Ideas 2010?, Battle of Ideas website, accessed 28 Apr 2010
  3. Hope for the Best - Interview with Claire Fox, website Spannermedia.com
  4. Who Are They, London Review of Books website, accessed 14 Nov 2010
  5. Beware the Institute of Ideas Conservation-Economy, 1 Nov 2010
  6. Battle of Ideas, Is the Revolutionary Communist Party still the vanguard? November 6, 2010 · 11:49 am
  7. "2005 Partners", Battle of Ideas website, accessed 7 June 2010
  8. "2006 Partners", Battle of Ideas website, accessed 7 June 2010
  9. "Partners Listing", Battle of Ideas, 2007, retrieved from the Internet Archive of 11 October 2007, accessed 7 June 2010
  10. "Partners", Battle of Ideas website, accessed 7 June 2010
  11. "Partners", Battle of Ideas website, accessed 7 June 2010
  12. "[1]", Battle of Ideas website, accessed 26 October 2010
  13. "[2]", Battle of Ideas website, accessed 3 September 2011
  14. Strategic Award supports The Battle of Ideas festival and Debating Matters Wellcome Trust website acc 5 March 2011
  15. Battle of Ideas speakers listing, Battle of Ideas website, last accessed on 30 November 2016.
  16. Speakers Listing, Battle of Ideas website, accessed 28 Apr 2011