![]() | Philip Collins is a writer on The Times and a Senior Visiting Fellow in the Department of Government at the London School of Economics. He was, until July 2007, Chief Speech Writer to the Prime Minister, Tony Blair, in 10 Downing Street. Between 2000 and 2004, he was Director of the Social Market Foundation (SMF), an independent think-tank and charity. Prior to that, Mr. Collins spent five years as an investment banker, ending his time in the City as the top ranked equity strategist in the smaller companies sector. He has also worked as a political assistant to Frank Field MP, for the Institute of Education at the University of London and for the BBC and London Weekend Television. Mr. Collins has published two novels with Harper Collins and a number of academic books on broadcasting policy and public service reform. He is 41 years of age, married with two sons and lives in London. |
Sunday 1 November 2009, 10.45am Upper Gulbenkian Gallery
Nudge Nudge, Nag Nag: the new politics of behaviour
The Liberal Republic, with Richard Reeves (Demos, 2009)
"No word was untested, no argument taken for granted, no opinion dismissed without argument nor accepted without argument."
David Jones, professor of bioethics, St Mary's University College