Duncan Davies Medal

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The Duncan Davies Medal is a medal of Research and Development Society to "an individual who has made an outstanding contribution toward making the UK the best-performing research and development environment in the world.".[1] It is named after Duncan S. Davies.[2]

Recipients[edit]

  • 1990 Robert Malpas – Marketing the Future
  • 1991 Sir Austin Bide – The influence of science and technology on social progress
  • 1992 Brian Newbould – The Birth And Growth Of The Pharmaceutical Industry
  • 1993 Derek Roberts – How To Get The Best Out Of Academic Research
  • 1994 Sir Robin Nicholson – Industrial R&D In The UK: A New Future?
  • 1995 David McMurtry – Cost-Effective R&D In A Small High-Tech Environment
  • 1996 Sir Geoffrey Allen – A Sporting Attitude To R&D
  • 1997 Sir Richard Sykes – Science In The Business Context: Turning Technology Into Health And Wealth
  • 1998 Alan Rudge – Research, Relevance, And The Road To Ruin
  • 1999 Sir Peter Williams – Barriers To Innovation: Myth Or Reality?
  • 2000 Lord Bragg – Enhancing The Level Of Public Debate On Scientific Matters
  • 2001 Philip Ruffles – Linking Research & Development To Corporate Strategy And Growth
  • 2002 Richard Brook – Maecenas And The Multitude: Reflections On Peer Review
  • 2003 Lord Sainsbury – Exploiting R&D At Regional Level
  • 2004 Dame Bridget Ogilvie – The Quixotic Nature Of The Involvement Of The Community In The Development Of New Medical Treatments
  • 2005 Lord Bhattacharya – The Expanding World Of Technology
  • 2006 Sir Tom McKillop – The Challenges of Innovation
  • 2007 Sir Robin Saxby – From start up in a barn in Cambridge to global standard and beyond
  • 2008 Sir David King – The challenges of the 21st century
  • 2009 Dame Wendy Hall – Research 2.0: the Age of Networks
  • 2010 Dame Sue Ion - Fuel for thought – meeting the energy challenges of the 21st Century

References[edit]

  1. ^ "The Duncan Davies Medal". Archived from the original on 2012-11-16. Retrieved 2013-05-12.
  2. ^ "DUNCAN S. DAVIES 1921-1987". NAE Website. Retrieved 2023-10-07.