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James Wilsdon

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Head of Science and Innovation

James Wilsdon leads the science and innovation programme at Demos and is Director of The Atlas of Ideas project. He is also a Senior Research Fellow in the Institute for Advanced Studies at Lancaster University.

Contact details:
Email: james.wilsdon@demos.co.uk

Expertise:
Science, innovation, new technologies, ethics, sustainability, higher education
Media Information:
Print:
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Radio:
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TV:
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James Wilsdon leads the science and innovation programme at Demos. He is also a Senior Research Fellow in the Institute for Advanced Studies at Lancaster University. His research interests include: science and innovation policy; sustainable development; emerging technologies; and the globalisation of R&D and higher education.

Since 2005, he has been Director of The Atlas of Ideas, a five-year programme which aims to map new patterns of innovation in Asia, Africa, Latin America and the Middle East. The first phase of The Atlas of Ideas was described by the Financial Times as 'the most comprehensive assessment so far of emerging innovation in China, India and Korea'. A second phase is now underway, and will include studies of Brazil and the Islamic world.

James regularly advises governments, companies and NGOs, and has undertaken projects for the European Commission, Cabinet Office, Foreign and Commonwealth Office, DIUS, NESTA, European Space Agency, Sitra, Vodafone, Greenpeace, the Organisation of the Islamic Conference, Unilever and Microsoft.

He is an experienced public speaker and has lectured or presented in over twenty countries. His writing has featured in publications such as the Financial Times, Guardian, Times Higher Education,  China Daily, OpenDemocracy, Renewal, SEED and Green Futures.

Before taking up his current role in 2004, James spent three years as Head of Strategy at Demos. From 1997 to 2001, he was Senior Policy Adviser at the sustainability charity Forum for the Future.

James has a first-class degree in philosophy and theology from Oxford University and a PhD in sustainable technologies from Middlesex University. He is a member of the European Commission's Expert Group on the Global Governance of Science, a Fellow of the Royal Society for the Arts, an Associate of Forum for the Future and a Trustee of People and Planet. Aged 34, he lives in Cumbria with his wife and two sons, and divides his time between London and the Lake District.

His publications include:

His articles include:

  • 'Building a bright continent: can prioritizing science catalyze Africa's efforts to join the global economy?' SEED magazine, May/June 2008
  • 'At last, real creative spark' - comment on the DIUS white paper 'Innovation Nation', Times Higher Education, 27 March 2008
  • 'The way to go'  - a review of recent books on death and aging, Financial Times, 23 February 2008
  • 'Medicine Men' A review of Alternative Medicine? A history by Roberta Bivins, Financial Times, 20 October 2007
  • 'Islamic innovation is finally on a rising crescent', Financial Times, 19 October 2007
  • 'China can lead the world in innovation', China Daily, 11 September 2007
  • 'The rules of engagement: dialogue and democracy in creating nanotechnology futures' (with J Stilgoe) in  Nanoethics: the Ethical and Social Implications of Nanotechnology, Edited by F Allhoff et al. (Wiley, 2007)
  • 'Innovation needs some fresh ideas' Times Higher Education Supplement, 13 July 2007
  • 'The new geography of science' (with C Leadbeater), E!Sharp, March-April 2007
  • 'The next science superpower', IET Engineering and Technology, March 2007
  • 'Asian economies herald a new dawn of technological innovation' (with C Leadbeater), The Times, 17 January 2007
  • 'From Bio to Nano: Learning Lessons from the UK Agricultural Biotechnology Controversy' (with M Kearnes et  al), Science as Culture Vol. 15, No. 4. 291-307, December 2006
  • 'A new geography for research collaboration' (with J Adams), Research Fortnight, 27 September 2006
  • 'The science lobby is getting it wrong on innovation', Financial Times, 3 November 2006
  • 'Artificial intelligence' (review of Stefan Collini's Absent Minds), Financial Times, 4 March 2006
  • Stop bleating about the threat from India and China' The Quarter, Prospect Magazine, March 2006
  • The man who wants to live forever' (with P Miller, a profile of Aubrey de Grey) OpenDemocracy.net, 3 February 2006
  • ‘Who would not seize the chance to live to 150?’ Financial Times, February 2006
  • Am I Bovvered? A debate on engagement vs accountability’ Research Fortnight, 12 October 2005
  • ‘Do not fear the rise of world-class science in Asia’ (with C Leadbeater) Financial Times, 12 October 2005
  • Small talk: new ways of democratising science and technology’ OpenDemocracy.net, 27 September 2005
  • ‘Political science’ (a review of Sheila Jasanoff’s Designs on Nature) Financial Times, 10 September 2005
  • ‘Scientists need to reconnect with the people’ Financial Times, 5 September 2005
  • 'Peer Review ' (a review of “The March of Unreason” by Dick Taverne), Financial Times, 16 April 2005
  • A deeper shade of green?Renewal Vol. 12 No 4, 2004)
  • ‘Dialogue is moving upstream’ Science and Public Affairs, The BA, December 2004
  • Techno Probe ', The Guardian, 1 September 2004
  • ‘Bangalore or Bust?’ Green Futures, July/August 2004
  • ‘The Politics of Small Things: nanoscience, risk and democracy’, Renewal Vol. 12 No. 2
  • ‘Nanotech needs to listen to its public, and now’, Financial Times, 1 September 2004
  • Mission to Planet Rumsfeld ', The Guardian, 1 March 2004
  • ‘The Well-Slept Society’ (with C Leadbeater) Green Futures, November/December 2003
  • ‘Space: sustainability’s new frontier?’ Green Futures, November/December 2003
  • ‘Rules of Engagement’, The Parliamentary Monitor, Special issue on science and technology, October 2003
  • ‘The Civil Corporation’, Green Futures, September 2001
  • ‘Greening the New Economy’, Business 2.0, Issue 10, February 2001
  • ‘Making Sense of Sustainability’, (with J Porritt) Environmental Scientist, Vol. 9 No.6, Nov-Dec 2000