List of Imperial College London people
This is a list of Imperial College London people, including notable students and staff from the various historical institutions which are now part of Imperial College. Students who later became academics at Imperial are listed in the alumni section only to avoid duplication.
Alumni
Scientists and engineers
- Bissan Al-Lazikani (data scientist)
- Sir Roy M. Anderson (epidemiology – mathematically modelled the spread of Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease and AIDS.)
- Dame Mary Archer (British scientist specialising in solar power conversion)
- Eric Ashby, Baron Ashby (botanist)
- Ian Bayley (computer scientist)
- Sir Henry De la Beche, founder of the British Geological Survey
- William Thomas Blanford (geologist)
- Kenneth Binmore (economist)
- Moses Blackman (crystallographer)
- George C. Clerk (Ghanaian botanist and plant pathologist)
- Sir Charles Vernon Boys (scientist)
- Donal Bradley (researcher in plastic electronics)
- Nessa Carey, virologist and author)
- Piers Corbyn (meteorologist)
- Donald Watts Davies (computer scientist)
- Herbert Dingle (English astronomer, best known for his claimed disproof of the theory of special relativity)
- Patrick Dixon (futurist, physician)
- Sir Lewis Leigh Fermor (geologist, first president of Indian National Science Academy)
- Amanda Fisher (biologist)
- Alfred Fowler (astronomer)
- Marc Garneau (first Canadian in space, Chancellor of Carleton University, Liberal Member of Parliament)
- John F. Griffiths (climatologist)
- Sir Thomas Henry Holland (geologist)
- Arthur Holmes (geologist)
- John Wesley Judd (geologist)
- David Latchman (geneticist)
- Kaveh Madani (environmental scientist, activist and former politician)
- Johnjoe McFadden (molecular geneticist and writer)
- C. Lloyd Morgan (psychologist)
- Naomi Oreskes (historian of science)
- Helen Porter (botanist)
- David E. Potter (founder and Chairman of Psion, Chairman of Symbian)
- John G. Ramsay (structural geologist)
- Murray Shanahan (computer scientist)
- Sir Alec Skempton (founding father of soil mechanics)
- Elsayed Elsayed Wagih (Egyptian virologist and biotechnologist)
- Leslie Valiant (theoretical computer scientist, best known for PAC Learning)
Chemists
- Henry Edward Armstrong (chemist)
- Richard Barrer (chemistry – developer of zeolites)
- Anthony Gerard Martin Barrett (FRS, FMedSci, Chemistry)
- Sir Derek Harold Richard Barton (Nobel laureate, chemistry)
- Dewan Singh Bhakuni Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar laureate
- Sir William Crookes (chemist and physicist)[1]
- Andrew deMello (chemist)
- Carl Djerassi (chemist; first oral contraceptive pill progestin norethisterone)
- George Finch
- Malcolm Green
- Christopher Kelk Ingold (of the Cahn-Ingold-Prelog rules)[2]
- Adinath Lahiri (Padma Bhushan and Padma Shri awardee)
- Sir Patrick Linstead (discoverer of phthalocyanine dyes)
- Sir William Henry Perkin (discoverer of aniline dyes, studied at the Royal College of Chemistry)[3]
- William Henry Perkin, Jr. (organic chemist, son of Sir William Henry Perkin, studied at the Royal College of Science)
- Juda Hirsch Quastel (chemist)
- Henry Rzepa (computational organic chemist)
- Jeremy Sanders (chemist)
- Martin Schroder (chemist)
- Sir Richard Sykes (biochemist, Chairman of GlaxoSmithKline)
- Sir Henry Tizard (Chemist and inventor)
- Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson (Nobel laureate, chemistry)
Engineers
- Asad Abidi (electrical engineer) – former dean of Lahore University of Management Sciences, member of the National Academy of Engineering
- Nicholas Ambraseys (civil engineer) – Founder of Engineering Seismology at Imperial College London
- Eric Ash (engineer)
- Ayodele Awojobi (first African awarded the D.Sc degree in mechanical engineering; main field: vibration)
- Cecil Balmond (civil engineer)
- Baron Richard Beeching (engineer)
- Alan Blumlein (electronic engineer)
- Wilfred Corrigan (American engineer and entrepreneur, founder of LSI Logic Corp.)
- Peter A. Cundall (rock engineer – Discrete Element Method)
- George Mercer Dawson (surveyor)
- James H. Ellis (engineer, conceived public-key cryptography)
- Sir Hugh Ford (engineer)
- Peter Gregson (research engineer, Vice-Chancellor of the Queen's University of Belfast)
- Dame Judith Hackitt (engineer and civil servant)[4]
- Sir Stanley Hooker (mechanical engineer)
- C.L.V. Jayathilake (engineer)
- Viktor Jensen (engineer)
- Frederick William Lanchester (aeronautic engineer)
- Meir Manny Lehman (software engineering)
- Tshilidzi Marwala (engineer)
- Sanjoy K. Mitter (electrical engineer)
- Dudley Maurice Newitt, chemical engineer, scientific director of the Special Operations Executive;[5]
- Alec Reeves (engineer, invented pulse-code modulation)
- Peter Rice (civil engineer)
- Donald Van Norman Roberts (civil engineer)
- Roger W.H. Sargent (chemical engineer)
- Luís Simões da Silva (civil engineer)
- Josef Singer (1923–2009) (aeronautical engineer; Israeli President of Technion – Israel Institute of Technology
- Nikolas Tombazis (Mclaren F1 and Scuderia Ferrari chief aerodynamicist)
- Kevin Warwick (engineer)
- Andrew J. Whittle (head of Civil Engineering at MIT)
- Richard Williams, Vice-Chancellor of Heriot-Watt University
- Christopher R. Wronski (electrical engineer)
- Shao Xianghua (metallurgical engineer)
- Olgierd Zienkiewicz (civil engineer – Finite Element Method)
Mathematicians and statisticians
- Daniel Afedzi Akyeampong (mathematician)
- Francis Allotey (mathematician)
- David Balding (mathematical statistician)
- Vincent Blondel (mathematician)
- Tony Brooker (mathematician and computer scientist)
- William Reginald Dean (applied mathematician and fluid dynamicist)
- E. W. Hobson (mathematician)
- Bill Parry (mathematician)
- L H C Tippett (statistician)
- Stuart Turnbull (financial mathematician)
Medicine
- Dame Sally Davis (Chief Medical Officer)[6]
- Sir Harold Ellis (surgeon)
- Sir Joseph Fayrer (physician noted for his writings on medicine in India)
- Marc Feldmann (expert on rheumatology)
- Sir Alexander Fleming (Nobel Laureate, Physiology and Medicine)
- Sir Frederick Hopkins (Nobel Laureate, Physiology and Medicine)
- Dame Rosalind Hurley (medical microbiologist, researcher, and ethicist)
- Sir Andrew Huxley (Nobel Laureate, Physiology and Medicine)
- Sir Bruce Keogh (medical director of the National Health Service)
- David Livingstone (congregationalist pioneer medical missionary in South Africa–Charing Cross Hospital)
- Norman Morris (Obstetrician and healthcare reformer)
- Albert Neuberger (chemical pathologist)
- William Kitchen Parker (physician and zoologist)
- Sir Rodney Robert Porter (Nobel Laureate, Physiology and Medicine)
- Ann Redgrave (orthopaedic surgery)
- Bernard Spilsbury (pathologist and one of the pioneers of modern forensic medicine)
- Joseph Toynbee (otologist)
- Augustus Desiré Waller (the invention of the electrocardiogram (ECG))
- Almroth Wright (advanced vaccination through the use of autogenous vaccines)
- Sir Magdi Yacoub (expert on live lobe lung transplant)
- Andrew Wakefield (discredited anti-vaccine doctor/activist)
Physicists
- Anthony R. Barringer (geophysicist and inventor)
- Fernando Brandao (physicist)
- Lesley Cohen (physicist)
- Andrew Crumey (physicist)
- Michael Duff (string theorist)
- Sir John Ambrose Fleming (physicist)[7]
- Piers Forster (climatologist)
- James R. Graham (astrophysicist)
- Joanna Haigh, professor of atmospheric physics
- Suzanne Imber (astrophysicist)
- Christopher Isham (physicist)
- Narinder Singh Kapany (physicist – optical fibres)
- Nicholas Kemmer (physicist)
- K. Kunaratnam (physicist)
- Norman Lockyer (discoverer of helium and founder of Nature)
- Yuval Ne'eman (1925–2006) (Israeli physicist, politician, and President of Tel Aviv University)
- T. E. Nevin, Irish physicist
- William George Penney (physicist who worked on the Manhattan Project)
- Nicholas J. Phillips (physicist)
- Martin Bodo Plenio (physicist)
- Patricia Rankin (physicist and Chair of the Department of Physics at Arizona State University
- Wolfgang Rindler (physicist and textbook author who introduced term 'Event Horizon')
- Christopher Sachrajda (physicist, Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS))
- Roy Sambles (President of the Institute of Physics)
- Le Jeu Sham (physicist)
- David Southwood (former President of the Royal Astronomical Society)
- Ray Streater (physicist)
- Vlatko Vedral (physicist)
- Sir Tejinder Virdee, experimental particle physicist;[8]
- Sir Gilbert Walker (physicist)
Politicians
- Adam Afriyie (MP For Windsor)
- Sir James Allen (Minister of Foreign Affairs, New Zealand)
- Hussain al-Shahristani (Iraq's Minister for Higher Education)
- Thomas Anthony Brake (British Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament (MP) for Carshalton and Wallington)
- Matthew Carrington (former Conservative Member of Parliament for Fulham, 1987–1997
- Frederic Creswell (mining engineer and Minister of Defense in South Africa)
- Edmund Daukoru (Minister of Energy for Nigeria and former OPEC President (2006))
- Les Ebdon, Director of Fair Access to Higher Education
- Rajiv Gandhi (former Prime Minister of India)[9]
- Adam Holloway (journalist and politician)
- Branislav Ivkovic (politician)
- Abubakarr Jalloh (Minister for Natural Resources, Sierra Leone)
- Sir Adrian Johns (former Governor of Gibraltar and former Second Sea Lord)
- Chris Kelly (former MP for Dudley South)
- Phillip Lee (MP For Bracknell)
- Rilwan Lukman (Petroleum Resources Minister of Nigeria and former Secretary General OPEC)
- Kaveh Madani (Vice President of the United Nations Environmental Assembly Bureau and Deputy Vice President of Iran)
- Ken Michael (Governor of Western Australia)
- Layla Moran (MP for Oxford West and Abingdon)
- Chi Onwurah (MP for Newcastle upon Tyne Central)
- Trevor Phillips (journalist and politician)
- J Y Pillay (civil servant)
- Joan Ruddock (politician)
- Sydney Russell-Wells (British MP)
- Guy Saint-Pierre (politician)
- Christos Staikouras (politician and economist)
- Richard Thomas Taylor (Independent Member of Parliament for Wyre Forest)
- Teo Chee Hean (Defence Minister of Singapore and former Chief of Navy)
- Desmond Stanley Turner (British Labour Party politician who was the Member of Parliament (MP) for Brighton Kemptown)
- Sir Julius Vogel (former Prime Minister of New Zealand)[10]
Business people
- Kaveh Alamouti (investment banker)
- Alfred Beit (gold and diamond magnate)
- Otto Beit (financier)
- Stan Bharti (founder of Forbes & Manhattan)
- Michael Birch (Founder of Bebo)
- Chew Choon Seng (CEO of Singapore Airlines)
- Hamdan Mohamad (Malaysia's water baron, CEO & President of Ranhill Berhad)
- Iain Conn (Group Managing Director of BP)
- Michael Cowpland (founder of Corel)
- Keith Duckworth (Founder of Cosworth Engineering)
- Colin Dyer (CEO of Jones Lang LaSalle)
- Alan Howard (co-founder of Brevan Howard)
- Koh Boon Hwee (Chairman of DBS Bank, Singapore)
- Anil Kumar (born 1958), management consultant who pled guilty to insider trading
- Martin Lamb, Chief Executive of IMI plc
- Danny Lui (founder of Lenovo)
- Mehraj Mattoo (Global Head, COMAS, Commerzbank)
- Cyrus Pallonji Mistry (Chairman of Tata Group)[11]
- Charlie Muirhead (Entrepreneur, founder of Rightster)
- Ronald Oxburgh (non-executive chairman of Royal Dutch Shell PLC)
- Leo Quinn (group chief executive of Balfour Beatty plc)
- Ian Read (CEO of Pfizer)
- Andrew Rickman OBE (technology billionaire)
- Sir Ralph Robins (Former CEO of Rolls-Royce)[12]
- Harold Roxbee Cox (aircraft engineer)
- Gary Tanaka (founder of Amerindo Investment Advisors)
- Winston Wong (businessman)
Others
- Anjana Ahuja (journalist)
- Kit Armstrong (pianist and composer)
- Louis Attrill (Sydney Olympics gold medallist, rowing)
- Sir Roger Bannister (athlete)[13]
- Laurent Bonomo (visiting student)
- Will Burrard-Lucas (photographer)
- David Cain (composer)
- I. C. Chacko (writer)
- Henry Cole (civil servant)
- Andrew Crumey (novelist)
- Declan Curry (presenter on BBC News 24)
- Simon Dennis (Sydney Olympics gold medallist, rowing)
- Bill Durodie (academic, risk analyst)
- Andy Fanshawe (mountaineer)
- Gabriel Ferez (visiting student)
- Pallab Ghosh (BBC Science Correspondent)
- Adrian Greenwood (historian and art dealer)
- Jessica Hsuan (Chinese actress)
- David Irving (author)
- Adam Kay (of the comedy duo Amateur Transplants)
- Nalin Kulatilaka (economist)
- Aarif Lee (Chinese actor and singer)
- Tan Yock Lin (professor of law and author)
- Brian May (astrophysicist, more commonly known as a member of the rock band Queen)[14]
- Anthony R. Michaelis (science journalist and publisher)
- Andreas Mogensen (First Danish astronaut)
- Ghanem Nuseibeh (Founder of Cornerstone Global Associates)
- Murad Osmann (photographer)
- Paul Rogers (Professor of Peace)
- Ted Simon (journalist)
- Simon Singh (popular science author)
- Daniel V. Snaith (IDM artist, records under the name Caribou)
- Richard Southwood (Vice-Chancellor, University of Oxford)
- George Reginald Starr (Special Operations Executive officer)
- Emma Townshend (Academic, musician and columnist)
- Kevin Walton (military, awarded the George Cross in 1946)
- Lancelot Ware (biochemist, barrister and co-founder of Mensa International)
- H. G. Wells (science fiction author)[15]
- Jane Yardley (author)
- Raymond Yiu (composer)
Staff
- Samson Abramsky, computer scientist
- John Stuart Archer, Vice-Chancellor and Principal of Heriot-Watt University
- Wendy Barclay, virologist
- John Beddington, population biologist
- Derek Bell, physician
- Sir Leszek Borysiewicz, immunologist and former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge
- Stephen D. M. Brown, geneticist
- Keith Browning (atmospheric scientist)
- Martin Buck, microbiologist
- Sir Ernst Boris Chain (Nobel Laureate, Physiology and Medicine)
- Colin Cherry (cognitive scientist – expert in cocktail party problem)
- Keith Clark (computer scientist)
- Ara Darzi, Baron Darzi of Denham (Parliamentary Under-Secretary, Leading Surgeon)
- Abbas Edalat (computer scientist)
- Peter Ellaway (Professor of neurosciences and mental health)
- Erol Gelenbe (computer scientist – G-networks and the random neural network)
- Nicholas Harrison (Professor of Computational Materials Science)
- Michael Hassell (population ecology)
- John Henry (toxicologist) (clinical toxicologist who did crucial work on poisoning and drug overdose)
- Sir Brian Hoskins (dynamical meteorologist)
- T. H. Huxley (biologist and author)
- Nick Jennings (computer scientist)
- Charles Kennedy (economist)
- Alexander King, scientist and policy adviser
- Armand Marie Leroi (biologist)
- Sir Basil John Mason (meteorologist)
- David Miles (economist)
- Christine Moffatt (nurse in leg ulcer care)
- Michael Stumpf (systems biologist)
- Robert Winston (fertility expert, politician, scientist and television presenter)
Chemists
- John Albery, chemist
- James Barber, biochemist
- Michael Bearpark, chemist and musician
- Anne Beloff-Chain (professor of biochemistry)
- Sir Alan Fersht, chemist[16]
- Sir Edward Frankland (chemist)[17]
- William Fyfe (geochemist)
- Sir Walter Haworth (Nobel laureate, chemistry)
- Sir Cyril Hinshelwood (Nobel laureate, chemistry)
- August Wilhelm von Hofmann (chemist)
- Jack Lewis, Baron Lewis of Newnham, inorganic chemist
- Michael Mingos (inorganic chemist)
- David Phillips, chemist[18]
- George Porter (Nobel laureate, chemistry)
- Rodney Robert Porter (biochemist, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine)
Engineers
- Igor Aleksander, electronic engineer
- John Argyris (civil and aeronautical engineer, one of the founders of the Finite Element Method)
- Peter Bradshaw, aeronautical engineer
- John Burland (civil engineer) – the person who stabilised the Leaning Tower of Pisa
- Clementine Chambon (chemical engineer)
- Stephen Glaister (civil engineering)
- Dame Julia Higgins (chemical engineer)[19]
- Frank Irving (aeronautical engineer)
- Eric Laithwaite (engineer)
- Dame Julia Polak (tissue engineer)
- Max Reis (chemical engineer and President of the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology)
- Brian Spalding (computational fluid dynamics)
- Molly Stevens, biomedical engineer
Mathematicians and statisticians
- Deborah Ashby, medical statistician
- Kevin Buzzard (mathematician, number theory)
- Sydney Chapman (mathematician)
- Alessio Corti (mathematician)
- Simon Donaldson (mathematician, Fields Medallist)[20]
- Yael Naim Dowker (mathematician)
- David Hand, statistician
- Martin Hairer (mathematician, Fields medallist)[21]
- Walter Hayman (mathematician)
- Sir James Lighthill (mathematician)
- Emma McCoy (mathematician and statistician)
- John Nelder (statistician)
- Andre Neves (mathematician)
- Sylvia Richardson (statistician)
- Klaus Roth (mathematician, Fields medallist)[22]
- Sir Adrian Smith (mathematician)
- Richard Thomas (mathematician, FRS)
- Alfred North Whitehead (mathematician)[23]
- Frank Yates (statistician, Guy Medallist)
Physicists
- Per Bak (theoretical physicist, self-organized criticality)
- Patrick Blackett, Baron Blackett (Nobel laureate, physics)
- David Blow (biophysicist)
- Sir Steven Cowley, physicist and president of Corpus Christi College, Oxford;[24]
- Fay Dowker (physicist)
- Dennis Gabor (Nobel laureate, physics)
- Betty Johnson, American theoretical physicist
- Sir Tom Kibble (physicist)[25]
- Julia King (Chief Executive of the Institute of Physics)
- Sir Peter Knight (physicist, quantum optics)
- Leonard Mandel (physicist, founder of quantum optics)
- Robert May, Baron May of Oxford (physicist, member of the House of Lords)
- Kirpal Nandra (astrophysicist)
- Jenny Nelson (Professor of Physics)
- Sir John Pendry (physicist)[26]
- Michael Rowan-Robinson (astronomer)
- Abdus Salam (Nobel laureate, physics)
- John M Squire, biophysicist
- R. A. Stradling (physicist)
- Ray Streater, physicist
- Sir George Paget Thomson (Nobel laureate, physics)
- Vlatko Vedral (physicist)
See also
- President and Rector of Imperial College London
- List of Nobel laureates affiliated with Imperial College London
- List of Fellows of Imperial College London
References
- ‘CROOKES, Prof. Sir William’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2016; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014 accessed 2 April 2017
- ‘INGOLD, Sir Christopher (Keik)’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2016; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014 accessed 2 April 2017
- ‘PERKIN, Sir William Henry’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2016; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2015 ; online edn, Feb 2015 accessed 2 April 2017
- Hackitt, Dame Judith (Elizabeth), WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. Retrieved 27 Dec. 2017, from http://www.ukwhoswho.com/view/10.1093/ww/9780199540884.001.0001/ww-9780199540884-e-151505.
- Newitt, Dudley Maurice, WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. Retrieved 27 Dec. 2017, from http://www.ukwhoswho.com/view/10.1093/ww/9780199540891.001.0001/ww-9780199540884-e-157958.
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- ‘GANDHI, Rajiv’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2016; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014 accessed 2 April 2017
- ‘VOGEL, Hon. Sir Julius’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2016; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014 accessed 2 April 2017
- ‘MISTRY, Cyrus Pallonji’, Who's Who 2017, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2017; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2016 ; online edn, Nov 2016 accessed 2 April 2017
- ‘ROBINS, Sir Ralph (Harry)’, Who's Who 2017, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2017; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2016 ; online edn, Nov 2016 accessed 2 April 2017
- ‘BANNISTER, Sir Roger (Gilbert)’, Who's Who 2017, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2017; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2016 ; online edn, Nov 2016 accessed 2 April 2017
- ‘MAY, Dr Brian Harold’, Who's Who 2017, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2017; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2016 ; online edn, Nov 2016 accessed 2 April 2017
- Wells, Herbert George, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 27 Dec. 2017, from http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-36831.
- Fersht, Sir Alan (Roy), WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. Retrieved 27 Dec. 2017, from http://www.ukwhoswho.com/view/10.1093/ww/9780199540884.001.0001/ww-9780199540884-e-15668.
- ‘FRANKLAND, Sir Edward’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2016; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014 accessed 2 April 2017
- Phillips, Prof. David, WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. Retrieved 27 Dec. 2017, from http://www.ukwhoswho.com/view/10.1093/ww/9780199540884.001.0001/ww-9780199540884-e-30743.
- Higgins, Dame Julia (Stretton), WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. Retrieved 27 Dec. 2017, from http://www.ukwhoswho.com/view/10.1093/ww/9780199540884.001.0001/ww-9780199540884-e-20092.
- "Fields medallists". Imperial College London. Retrieved 2018-07-13.
- "Fields medallists". Imperial College London. Retrieved 2018-07-13.
- "Fields medallists". Imperial College London. Retrieved 2018-07-13.
- ‘WHITEHEAD, Alfred North’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2016; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014 accessed 2 April 2017
- ‘COWLEY, Prof. Steven’, Who's Who 2017, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2017; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2016 ; online edn, Nov 2016 accessed 2 April 2017
- ‘KIBBLE, Sir Thomas (Walter Bannerman)’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2016; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2016 ; online edn, Nov 2016 accessed 2 April 2017
- ‘PENDRY, Sir John (Brian)’, Who's Who 2017, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2017; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2016 ; online edn, Nov 2016 accessed 2 April 2017
External links
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