- Geoff Mulgan
Geoff Mulgan is director of the
Young Foundation based in London and Visiting Professor atUniversity College, London , theLondon School of Economics andUniversity of Melbourne as well as being the chair of Involve. Previously he was:
*Director of Policy at10 Downing Street underBritish Prime Minister Tony Blair ,
*Director of thePrime Minister's Strategy Unit (formerly known as the Performance and Innovation Unit),
*Co-founder and Director of the London basedthink tank Demos (from 1993-98),
*Chief adviser toGordon Brown MP in the early 1990s [UK Who's Who 2006.]He obtained his Ph.D. in
telecommunications from theUniversity of Westminster . He was a Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and obtained a First Class degree fromBalliol College, Oxford . Mulgan was also trained as a Buddhist monk in Sri Lanka [Jay Walljasper, "Visionaries", Utne Books, 2001, and Charles Handy, "The New Alchemists", Random House, 1999.] , but instead worked in local government and academia in the UK, and became an influential writer on social and political issues in various newspapers and magazines in the 1990s. [including the Independent, Financial Times, Guardian, New Statesman and Marxism Today. ] He was made aCBE in 2005.He has written a number of books including: Communication and Control:networks and the new economies of communication (1991), Politics in an Anti-Political Age (1994), Connexity (1997) and Good and Bad Power: the Ideals and Betrayals of Government (Penguin 2006). He has written numerous Demos reports and pamphlets. His current base, the Young Foundation, mainly works on social innovation - design and launch of new social organisations, but also produces some publications, including recent ones on social innovation and the state of British society [www.youngfoundation.org.] He has lectured and advised governments around the world on policy and strategy - including China, Australia, the United States, Japan and Russia. He is profiled in two books - The New Alchemists (1999 by Charles Handy) and Visionaries (2001 by Jay Walljasper). He is a trustee of the
Design Council andthe Work Foundation .References
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