Brian Heap
Sir Robert Brian Heap is a British biological scientist.
He was educated at New Mills Grammar School in the Peak District, Derbyshire, and the University of Nottingham. He has an MA and a ScD from the University of Cambridge and Honorary DScs from Nottingham, York and St Andrews.
Career
- 1960: University Demonstrator, University of Cambridge
- 1963: Lalor Research Fellow, ARC Institute of Physiology, Babraham Institute, Cambridge
- 1964-95: Staff Member, AFRC Institute of Physiology, Babraham, serving as Head, Dept of Physiology, 1976; Head of Cambridge Research Station, 1986; Director Institute of Animal Physiology and Genetics Research, Cambridge and Edinburgh, 1989–93; Director of Science, BBSRC, Swindon 1991–94 and Director BBSRC Babraham Institute, 1993–94.
- 1994-2001: visiting senior fellow, School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge.
He was the Master of St Edmund's College, University of Cambridge, from 1996 until 2004 and has been a Special Professor in Animal Physiology at the University of Nottingham since 1988 until 2016. He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1989, and held the post of Royal Society Vice President and Foreign Secretary from 1996 to 2001. He was Executive Editor of the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, Series B from 2004-2007. He is a founder member of the International Society for Science and Religion and an Associate of the Faraday Institute for Science and Religion.
Brian Heap was President of the Institute of Biology 1996-1998, UK Representative on the European Science Foundation Strasbourg, 1994–97, a member of the Nuffield Council on Bioethics 1996-2001, UK Representative on the NATO Science Committee 1998-2005, member of the Scientific Advisory Panel for Emergency Responses at the Cabinet Office, Chairman of the Cambridge Genetics Knowledge Park and Public Health Genetics, 2002-2010, and President of the, 2010-2014. He was co-Project Leader of Biosciences for Farming in Africa, 2014–17, and senior adviser of Smart Villages from 2017.
In 1994, he was awarded CBE, and, in 2001, knighted for services to international science.
On 8 October 2007, the Duke of Edinburgh opened three new buildings at St Edmund's College, Cambridge, one of which was named the "Brian Heap Building".