![]() | Tony Gilland is Science and Society Director at the Institute of Ideas. Tony directs the IoI’s programme on scientific and medical controversies, particularly in relation to genetics, medical science and public health. He has programmed many symposiums, and edited several books on the subject. Most recently, Tony initiated the Science Education Project, investigating the state of science education in the UK. The project has thus far resulted in a book edited by Tony, What is science education for?, which generated widespread coverage. Tony has also written widely on the problem of risk aversion and defensiveness about scientific experimentation, contributing an article, ‘Trade War or Culture War? The GM Debate in Britain and the European Union’ to the book Let Them Eat Precaution. Tony is Director of the IoI’s acclaimed Debating Matters Competition for sixth-form students. He is a frequent guest on radio and television programmes in the UK. Tony holds a degree in philosophy, politics and economics from the University of Oxford. |
Saturday 12 July 2008, 11.15am Norton Rose LLP
Choking on growth - from Yellow Peril to Green Menace!
Tuesday 28 October 2008, 6.00pm Foyles Charing Cross Road
Contemporary attitudes to ageing and dying
Saturday 1 November 2008, 9.00am Upper Gulbenkian Gallery
Battle of Ideas 2008 welcome address
Sunday 2 November 2008, 11.00am Lecture Theatre 1
Whose data is it anyway?
Sunday 2 November 2008, 2.00pm Lecture Theatre 1
Boozy Britain
Sunday 2 November 2008, 4.00pm Lecture Theatre 1
Hypochondriac Nation
What Is Science Education For? (ed.) (Academy of Ideas, 2006)
‘Trade War or Culture War? The GM Debate in Britain and the European Union’, in Let The Eat Precaution, (AEI, 2006)
Science: Can We Trust the Experts? (ed.) (Hodder Arnold, 2002)
Animal Experimentation: Good or Bad? (ed.) (Hodder Arnold, 2002)
Nature’s Revenge: Hurricanes, Floods and Climate Change (ed.) (Hodder Arnold, 2002)
‘Precaution, GM Crops and Farmland Birds’, in Rethinking Risk and the Precautionary Principle (Butterworth-Heinemann, 2000)
"I was astonished by the interest and by the fact that so many thoughtful and intelligent people were willing to give up a huge part of their weekends to listen to and discuss ideas."
Ruth Gledhill, religion correspondent, The Times