Director of Estates and Campus Services

STRUCTURE AND GOVERNANCE

THE COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES

THE COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES The College is headed on an interim basis by Professor Henrietta O’Connor, and is responsible for approximately 12,000 students, nearly one third of which come from overseas, and 800+ staff. The College includes a wide range of social sciences and arts disciplines, and supports a variety of interdisciplinary work. The College’s dynamic environment emphasises a collegial atmosphere among academic staff and research students which has allowed for the formation of innovative research groups and high-impact research projects. THE CORPORATE DIVISIONS The Corporate Divisions are led by Dave Hall, Registrar and Chief Operating Officer, comprising of c. 1,500 staff. The Corporate Divisions include:- • Division of Estates & Campus Services • Division of External Relations • Division of Finance • Division of Human Resources • Division of IT Services • Division of Library, Learning & Information Services • Division of Research & Enterprise • Division of Student & Academic Services • Legal Services

The College, headed by the Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Head of College and Dean of Medicine, Professor Philip Baker, is a thriving community of academic expertise based in laboratory, clinical, health and social science settings. The College has nearly 1,000 staff and approaching 4,000 students in its three schools, which cover the broad spectrum of biological, medical and human sciences. Based in some of the newest purpose-built scientific accommodation in the country, the College offers a wide range of courses and expertise, with quality recognised throughout the scientific community. The College continues to attract new research grants and awards, new colleagues, partnerships with the NHS, industry and the public sector. The annual research income is more than £30 million. The College, headed by Professor Paul Monks, comprises seven research-led departments: Chemistry, Engineering, Geography, Geology, Informatics, Mathematics and Physics and Astronomy. Together, these departments teach approximately 4000 students, undertaking diverse programmes of study, from human geography through a range of laboratory-based subjects to engineering. They also generate more than a third of the University’s research income. Although each department has a distinct identity, there are a number of major interdisciplinary research activities, typified by centres in Space Research, Climate Change Research, Mathematical/Computational Modelling and Advanced Microscopy. Researchers within the College have international reputations and collaborations with researchers throughout the world, making it an exciting environment for both research and teaching. THE COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

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