The University of East Anglia
is a campus-based university located in Norwich, England, and founded in 1963. [1] The university is a member of the 1994 Group of research-intensive universities. [2] The University was ranked 20th in the The Times Good University Guide 2008, [3] and joint first for student satisfaction among mainstream universities in the 2006 National Student Survey. [4] The University was also ranked 57th in Europe, and one of the top 200 universities in the world, in the 2007 Academic Ranking of World Universities published by Shanghai Jiao Tong University. [5]
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UNIVERSITY OF EAST ANGLIA TICKETS
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History
thumb, now home to
Norwich Law School
Talk of establishing a university in
Norwich began as early as the 19th century, but it wasn't until 1960, as the post-war "bulge" generation was bringing about an expansion in higher education, that the University of East Anglia finally got the go-ahead.
[6] UEA admitted its first students in 1963 in temporary accommodation in Earlham Hall, on the western edge of the city of
Norwich about 3 miles from the city centre, and the permanent
campus was built on the adjacent Earlham Golf Course, principally to a design by
Sir Denys Lasdun.
[7]
The UEA campus evolved to exhibit some interesting architectural features. The main teaching building takes the form of a continuous wall running approximately west-east. The early student residences built in the 1960s take the form of distinctive "ziggurats", but financial cutbacks by the early 1970s meant that the full original plan for building
ziggurat residences had to be abandoned, and replaced by the less inspiring north-south wall of Waveney Terrace (which was demolished in 2006). UEA also took over the former
RAF/
US Air Force barracks at
Horsham St. Faith airfield, and used them as residences until the early 1990's. This outpost of campus life was formally known as "Fifers Lane" from the road it stood on, but was called "Horsham" or simply "Fifers" by its residents. It developed its own unique style of student life. Being adjacent to extant army accommodation, the on-site general shop was a branch of the
NAAFI. Fifers Lane eventually closed in 1994, when further residences, again in an advanced architectural style, were built on campus.
In the mid-1970s, extraction of gravel in the valley of the
River Yare, which runs to the south of the campus, resulted in the university acquiring its own lake or "
Broad" as it is sometimes referred to. At more or less the same time, a bequest of tribal art and 20th century painting and sculpture, by artists such as
Francis Bacon and
Henry Moore, from
Sir Robert and Lady Lisa Sainsbury resulted in the construction of the striking
Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts at the western end of the main teaching wall, one of the first major works of architect
Norman Foster, Baron Foster of Thames Bank.
Academic reputation
The university has a strong academic reputation and consistently places highly in national and international league tables.
In 2008
The Times
newspaper ranked UEA 20th in the UK,
[8] while in the same year UEA ranked 22nd in
The Sunday Times,
[9] 20th in
The Telegraph,
[10] 40th in
The Guardian,
[11] and 20th in
The Independent.
[12]
Internationally, in 2007 the
Shanghai Jiao Tong University Academic Ranking of World Universities placed UEA 57th in Europe and 151-200th in the world,
[13] while in the same year The G-Factor World Rankings placed UEA 239th in the world.
[14]
UEA has also had notable successes in terms of courses taught. The university's highly regarded
MA in Creative Writing was founded by
Sir Malcolm Bradbury and
Sir Angus Wilson in 1970 and has gone on to produce a plethora of distinguished authors including
Ian McEwan and
Kazuo Ishiguro.
Sir Malcolm Bradbury's 1975 novel
The History Man
is believed to be based on his experiences at the university, satirising as it does life and work in a modern 1960s-built University campus. The German émigré novelist
W. G. Sebald also taught in the School of Literature until his untimely death, from a car accident, in 2001.
[15] In addition, the
Climatic Research Unit in the School of Environmental Sciences founded in 1972 by
Hubert Lamb and presently directed by
Phil Jones has been an early centre of work for climate change research.
Faculties and Schools
The university offers over 300 courses across 4 Faculties and 23 Schools of Study.
[16] They are as follows:
Faculty of Arts and Humanities
- American Studies [17]
- Film and Television Studies [18]
- History [19]
- Language, Linguistics and Translation Studies [20]
- Literature and Creative Writing [21]
- Music [22]
- Philosophy [23]
- Political, Social and International Studies [24]
- World Art Studies and Museology [25]
Faculty of Health
- Allied Health Professions [26]
- Medicine, Health Policy and Practice [27]
- Nursing and Midwifery [28]
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thumb designed by Lord Norman Foster to house the art collection of Sir Robert and Lady Lisa Sainsbury
Faculty of Science
- Biological Sciences [29]
- Chemical Sciences & Pharmacy [30]
- Computing Sciences [31]
- Environmental Sciences [32]
- Mathematics [33]
Faculty of Social Sciences
- Development Studies [34]
- Economics [35]
- Education and Lifelong Learning [36]
- Law [37]
- Norwich Business School [38]
- Social Work and Psychology [39]
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Union of UEA Students
The UEA Union has a selection of sports clubs and societies ranging from football and rugby clubs to the independent student newspaper
Concrete
. Nexus UTV the campus television station broadcasts news, documentaries and various other programmes, and is one of the oldest still-running student television stations in the country having been established in 1968.
[40] Livewire 1350AM, the award winning campus radio station, which transmits to air on 1350AM in the vicinity of the University as well as broadcasting on the internet, was established in 1989. A more recent society, 'The Campus Sustainability Initiative', founded
The Sustainability Initiative Fund where UEA students each pay a £1 per year sustainability fee with the proceeds going towards sustainable projects on campus such as implementing renewable energies or energy conservation projects. The initiative was supported by UEA students in a campus referendum with a 78% majority, and the project was inspired by a similar initiaitve at the
University of California, Santa Barbara.
The UEA Student Union operates many of the services on the university campus which are open to all members of the university community and the general public. Connected to both "The Street" and "The Square" is one of the most popular Union venues, the "Union Pub and Bar" which underwent extension and refurbishment at the cost of £1.2 million in 2002. Other bars include "The Hive" (which, due to efforts from the
Students' Union, was refurbished for the start of the 2004/05 academic year), and the "Graduate Students Club". In the same building is The LCR, known in full as either The Large
[41] or Lower
[42] Common Room. The LCR is home to weekly campus discos, as well as the many touring gigs. The students' union also run
The Waterfront venue off campus in Norwich's King Street.
thumb
The UEA student body is one of the more politically active among UK universities, with turnout at ballots averaging around 20% (compared to a national average of around 15%).
[43] In 2007 the Union Council voted to oppose the
National Union of Students' no-platform policy which bans extremists such as the BNP and Hizb-ut Tahrir from standing in NUS elections. A letter was sent to NUS president
Gemma Tumelty to inform her of this. She later voiced her disagreement but said she 'looked forward to having the debate' with the union's delegates at next years annual conference. The no-platform issue will now be put to a referendum of all students.
Campus
Notable features of the UEA campus include Earlham Hall which is home to
Norwich Law School, the
Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts at the western end of the main teaching wall designed by
Norman Foster, Baron Foster of Thames Bank to house the art collection of
Sir Robert and Lady Lisa Sainsbury, and "Sportspark", one of the biggest multi-sports facilities in the country, built in 2001 thanks to a £14.5 million grant from
Sport England Lottery Fund.
[44] Other features include the large university lake or "broad" at the southern edge of campus, "The Square", a popular central outdoor meeting place at the heart of campus flanked by concrete steps.
In terms of accommodation the university campus is home to 8 en-suite residences, namely Constable Terrace, Nelson Court, and
Britten, Colman, Victory, Kett, Browne, and Paston Houses. The residences are named after
Horatio Nelson,
John Constable,
Benjamin Britten,
Jeremiah Colman,
Horatio Nelson's ship
HMS Victory,
Robert Kett,
Sir Thomas Browne and the Paston family who wrote the
Paston Letters. The university also offers en-suite accommodation at the University Village, located adjacent to the university campus. There are also 4 non en-suite residences on campus, namely Norfolk and Suffolk terrace's also known as the
ziggurats, and Orwell and Wolfson Close. In addition the university manages Mary Chapman Court, a hall of residence located in Norwich city centre.
[45]
Facilities on campus include the "Union Pub and Bar", a concert and disco venue called the "The LCR", a canteen called "Zest", a cafe/coffee shop called "The Blend", a bar/coffee shop called "The Hive", a graduate bar called the "Graduate Students Club" and "The Street" which features a 24-hour launderette, the Union Food Outlet, Union Paper Shop, Union Post Office, an espresso bar called "DolcHe Vita", branches of
NatWest,
HSBC and
Barclays, and a
Waterstone's book shop.
The campus is linked to the city centre by frequent buses, operated by
First, via Unthank Road and
Earlham Road. There is also a bus service to the
Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital and
Bowthorpe again operated by
First.
Recent developments
In 2005 the university, in partnership with the
University of Essex, and with the support of
Suffolk County Council, the
East of England Development Agency, Ipswich Borough Council, Suffolk College, and the
Learning and Skills Council, secured £15 million funding from the
Higher Education Funding Council for England for the creation of a new campus in the Waterfront area of
Ipswich, called
University Campus Suffolk or UCS.
[46] The campus opened in September 2007.
[46]
Corporate identity
On 18 February 2008 the University of East Anglia began rolling out a new corporate identity, which was developed in response to a brand positioning project conducted in late 2006, and the five-year Corporate Plan approved by the University's Council in January 2008. Design agency Blast were commissioned to create the new corporate identity, who had also won awards for the branding of the
University of Sussex. All newly commissioned materials will use the new logo, but the roll-out will be implemented over a 12-18 month period to ensure there is no wastage of existing stocks.
[48]
Notable alumni
thumb thumb
UEA alumni in politics include the preceding Leader of the House of Lords
Valerie Amos, Baroness Amos,
[49] the Leader of the Conservatives in the House of Lords
Thomas Galbraith, 2nd Baron Strathclyde,
[50] Housing Minister
Caroline Flint,
[51] Governor of Gibraltar Lieutenant General
Sir Robert Fulton,
[52] Conservative blogger and co-founder and presenter of
18 Doughty Street Iain Dale,
[53] former Iraqi Biological Weapons Chief
Dr Rihab Taha,
[54] former leader of the Icelandic
Social Democratic Alliance Össur Skarphéðinsson,
[55] and Liberal Democrat Spokesperson for Communities and Local Government
Rosalind Scott, Baroness Scott of Needham Market.
[56] The university is also the alma mater of the MP's
Douglas Carswell,
[57] Jon Owen Jones,
[58] and
Ivor Stanbrook,
[59] as well as of Serbian politician
Jovan Ratkovic,
[60] and Malaysian politician
Wan Hisham Wan Salleh.
[61]
In literature UEA alumni include the
Booker Prize winning author
Ian McEwan,
[62] Whitbread and
Booker Prize winner
Kazuo Ishiguro author of
The Remains of the Day,
[63] Booker Prize winner
Anne Enright,
[64] and the
Whitbread Award winning author's
Rose Tremain,
[65] Tash Aw,
[66] and
Susan Fletcher.
[67] UEA is also the alma mater of the novelists
Tracy Chevalier,
[68] Toby Litt,
[69] Simon Scarrow,
[70] John Boyne,
[71] Naomi Alderman,
[72] David Almond,
[73] Trezza Azzopardi,
[74] Erica Wagner,
[75] Deirdre Madden,
[76] Andrew Miller,
[77] and
Christopher Catherwood.
[78]
In media UEA alumni include
The Fast Show comedians
Paul Whitehouse,
Charlie Higson, and
David Cummings,
[79] [80] [81] and the actors
Jack Davenport,
[82] John Rhys-Davies,
[83] James Frain,
[84] and
Tim Bentinck, 12th Earl of Portland.
[85] The university is also the alma mater of the explorer
Benedict Allen,
[86] the comedian
Arthur Smith,
[87] the newsreaders
Geraint Vincent and
Selina Scott,
[88] [89] former Controller of BBC One
Jonathan Powell,
[90] former Controller of BBC Two
Jane Root, the television executives
Jenny Abramsky,
[91] Stephen Lambert, and
Simon Nicholls,
[92] and the football commentator
Martin Tyler.
[93] thumb
UEA is also the alma mater of the current head of the
South African Reserve Bank Tito Mboweni,
[94] Director of the
Museum of London Jack Lohman,
[95] former
Commander of UK Maritime Forces and current Commandant of the
Joint Services Command and Staff College Rear Admiral Neil Morisetti, and President of the
European Patent Office Alison Brimelow.
[96]
UEA alumni in academia include the winner of the 2001
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine and President of
Rockefeller University Sir Paul Nurse,
[97] Vice-Chancellor of
Lancaster University Paul Wellings,
[98] and the former Vice-Chancellor of
Bayero University Ibrahim H. Umar who also served as Chairman of the Board of Governors of the
International Atomic Energy Authority. The university is also the alma mater of the former
United Nations Commissioner for HIV/AIDS and Governance in Africa Alan Whiteside,
[99] as well as noted academics
Nick Barton,
[100] Christopher Lane,
[101] Don Grierson,
[102] Graeme Turner,
[103] James Chapman,
[104] Selim Deringil,
[105] and
Gerald Gazdar.
[106]
Notable academics
For a more comprehensive list see :Category:Academics of the University of East Anglia
- Sir Malcolm Bradbury, former Professor of American Studies, co-founder of the UEA Creative Writing Course
- Angela Carter, former writer in residence
- Richard J. Evans, former lecturer in Modern History
- Giles Foden, Professor of Creative Writing
- John Garrett, former lecturer in government
- Ian Gibson, former Dean of Biology
- Patricia Hollis, Baroness Hollis of Heigham, lecturer and Reader in Modern History (1967–1990)
- Phil Jones, Professor of Environmental Sciences, Director of the Climatic Research Unit
- Paul Kennedy, Professor of History (1970–1983)
- Sir David King, Lecturer in Chemical Physics (1963-1966)
- Hubert Lamb, founder and Director of the Climatic Research Unit
- Andrew Motion, Professor of Creative Writing (1995-2002)
- Shirley Pearce, former Professor of Health Psychology and former Dean of the Institute of Health
- Jonathan Raban, lecturer in British and American literature (1967-1969)
- Tracy Ryan, former lecturer in Australian Literature and Film
- W. G. Sebald, former Professor of German Literature, founder of the British Centre for Literary Translation
- Steve Smith, former Director of the Centre for Public Choice Studies
- Robert Watson, Chair of Environmental Science and Science Director of the Tyndall Centre
- Sir Angus Wilson, lecturer in Creative Writing, co-founder of the UEA Creative Writing Course
- Solly Zuckerman, Baron Zuckerman, Professor of Anatomy (1969–1974)
Governance
The university is nominally led by a
Chancellor, who is the titular head of the university, and is typically a well-known public figure. The day to day chief executive role is the responsibility of the
Vice-Chancellor, a full time academic post.
Chancellors
- Harold Mackintosh, 1st Viscount Mackintosh of Halifax (1962-1964)
- Oliver Franks, Baron Franks (1965-1984)
- Professor Owen Chadwick (1984-1994)
- Sir Geoffrey Allen (1994-2003)
- Sir Brandon Gough (2003-present)
Vice Chancellors
- Professor Frank Thistlethwaite (1961-1980)
- Professor Sir Michael Warwick Thompson (1980-1986)
- Professor Derek Clissold Burke (1987-1995)
- Dame Elizabeth Esteve-Coll (1995-1997)
- Vincent Watts (1997-2002)
- Professor David Eastwood (2002-2006)
- Professor Bill MacMillan (2006-present)
References
- The History of UEA
- 1994 Group Member Institutions
- The Times Good University Guide 2007
- The University of East Anglia has been ranked joint first for student satisfaction among full-time mainstream English universities.
- Shanghai Jiao Tong University Academic Ranking of World Universities 2007
- History of the University of East Anglia
- History of UEA
- The Times Good University Guide 2008
- The Sunday Times University Guide 2008
- The Telegraph University League Table
- The Guardian University Guide 2009
- The Independent University League Table
- Shanghai Jiao Tong University World Rankings 2007
- G-Factor World Rankings 2007
- W.G.Sebald
- UEA Facts and Figures
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/hum/ams
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/hum/ftv
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/hum/his
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/hum/llt
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/hum/lit
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/hum/music
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/hum/philosophy
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/hum/psi
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/hum/worldart
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/foh/ahp
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/foh/med
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/foh/nam
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/sci/bio
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/sci/cap
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/sci/computing
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/sci/env
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/sci/mth
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/ssf/dev
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/ssf/eco
- http://www.uea.ac.uk/edu/
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/ssf/law
- http://www.mgt.uea.ac.uk/
- http://www1.uea.ac.uk/cm/home/schools/ssf/swp
- Nexus University TV
- www.stu.uea.ac.uk/ents/venues
- www.stu.uea.ac.uk/freshers/adoc.2005-08-16.3617
- University of East Anglia
- Sportspark
- Mary Chapman Court
- HEFCE back University Campus Suffolk bid
- HEFCE back University Campus Suffolk bid
- UEA Brand Identity
- Biography of Valerie Amos, Baroness Amos
- Biography of Thomas Galbraith, 2nd Baron Strathclyde
- Biography of Caroline Flint
- Biography of Lieutenant General Sir Robert Fulton
- Biography of Iain Dale
- Biography of Dr Rihab Taha
- Biography of Össur Skarphéðinsson
- Biography of Rosalind Scott, Baroness Scott of Needham Market
- Biography of Douglas Carswell
- Biography of Jon Owen Jones
- Biography of Ivor Stanbrook
- Biography of Jovan Ratkovic
- Biography of Wan Hisham Wan Salleh
- Biography of Ian McEwan
- Biography of Kazuo Ishiguro
- Biography of Anne Enright
- Biography of Rose Tremain
- Biography of Tash Aw
- Biography of Susan Fletcher
- Biography of Tracy Chevalier
- Biography of Toby Litt
- Biography of Simon Scarrow
- Biography of John Boyne
- Biography of Naomi Alderman
- Biography of David Almond
- Biography of Trezza Azzopardi
- Biography of Erica Wagner
- Biography of Deirdre Madden
- Biography of Andrew Miller
- Biography of Christopher Catherwood
- Biography of Paul Whitehouse
- Biography of Charlie Higson
- UEA notable alumni
- Biography of Jack Davenport
- Biography of John Rhys-Davies
- Biography of James Frain
- Biography of Tim Bentinck, 12th Earl of Portland
- Biography of Benedict Allen
- Biography of Arthur Smith
- Biography of Geraint Vincent
- Biography of Selina Scott
- The History of the University of East Anglia
- Biography of Jenny Abramsky
- Biography of Simon Nicholls
- Biography of Martin Tyler
- Biography of Tito Mboweni
- Biography of Jack Lohman
- European Patent Office web site, ''Alison Brimelow's CV''. Consulted on July 2, 2007.
- Biography of Sir Paul Nurse
- Biography of Paul Wellings
- Biography of Alan Whiteside
- Biography of Nick Barton
- Biography of Christopher Lane
- Biography of Don Grierson
- Biography of Graeme Turner
- Biography of James Chapman
- Biography of Selim Deringil
- Biography of Gerald Gazdar