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The coat of arms of the University of Oxford. This is a list of professorships at the University of Oxford. During the early history of the university, the title of professor meant a doctor who taught. From the 16th century, it was used for those holding a professorship, also known as a chair.
University of Oxford portal; This category contains the professorships at the University of Oxford, England. For the holders of the chairs themselves, see Category:Statutory Professors of the University of Oxford.
University of Oxford portal; Statutory Professors is the title the University of Oxford uses for its University Professorships. There are currently just over 200 of them. A number of them are permanently endowed, others are not.
The Humanitas Programme. The Humanitas Programme is a series of Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge in England, intended to bring leading practitioners and scholars to both universities to address major themes in the arts, social sciences, and humanities.
Robert Ian (Bob) Tricker (born 1933) [1] is an expert in corporate governance who wrote the first book to use the title corporate governance in 1984, [2] based on his research at Nuffield College, Oxford.
Saïd Business School (Oxford Saïd or SBS) is the business school of the University of Oxford.The school is a provider of management education. Business and management classes started at Oxford in 1965 when the Centre of Management Studies, later relaunched as Templeton College, Oxford, was founded. [2]
Stanley Gordon Redding. Gordon Redding (30 May 1937 – 17 Feb 2024), was a British professor, academic, author, editor, and consultant. He was a specialist on China and the regional ethnic Chinese, and also worked on the comparison of different systems of capitalism, and on the role of education in societal development.
From 1976 until 1990 he was a Fellow of Templeton College, Oxford, and founding Director of the Oxford Institute of Information Management. He then spent eleven years at London Business School , where he held positions including Professor of Information Management, Director of the Centre for Network Economy, Deputy Dean, and Acting Dean.