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2001 - The Judges
Profiles
Andrew Marr (Chair) has
been a political columnist for The Scotsman, The Economist,
The Independent, The Express and The Observer. He was editor
of The Independent from 1996-8 and has won two 'Columnist
of the Year' awards. He has published three books - The
Battle for Scotland (Penguin 1992), Ruling Britannia (Michael
Joseph/Penguin 1995/6) and The Day Britain Died (Profile,
2000). He has made numerous radio and television programmes,
including BBC2's The Battle for Ideas and Channel
4's What if John Smith had Lived? Last summer, he
joined the BBC as Political Editor. He is married to
Jackie Ashley, broadcaster and political editor of the New
Statesman. They have three children and live in West
London.
Niall Ferguson is Professor of Political
and Financial History at Oxford University, Fellow and Tutor
in Modern History at Jesus College, Oxford and currently
Visiting Professor of Economics at the Leonard Stern Business
School, New York University. His books include Paper
and Iron: Hamburg Business and German Politics in the Era
of Inflation 1897-1927 (1995), shortlisted for the History
Today Book of the Year award, Virtual History: Alternatives
and Counterfactuals (1997), a collection of essays he
edited, The Pity of War: Explaining World War One (1998)
and The World’s Banker: The History of the House
of Rothschild (1998) which won the Wadsworth Prize for
Business History. He has just published The Cash
Nexus: Money and Power in the Modern World, 1700-2000. He
is a regular contributor to BBC television and radio, and
recently wrote and presented the Radio 4 series Days
that Shook the World. He lives with his wife and
three children in Oxfordshire.
Steve Jones is Professor of Genetics at
University College London. He gave the BBC Reith Lectures
in 1991, and presented a successful BBC TV series, In
the Blood on human genetics and evolution in1996. He
is a regular broadcaster and columnist including View
from the Lab for the Daily Telegraph. His books
include The Language of the Genes (which won the1994
RhÛne-Poulenc Science Book Prize), In The Blood (shortlisted
for the 1997 RhÛne-Poulenc) and Almost Like a Whale:
The Origin of Species Updated which won the 1999 BP
Natural World Book Prize. In 1997 he won the Royal
Society Faraday Medal for the Public Understanding of Science.
Annalena McAfee is
the Editor of the Guardian's Saturday Review. She was previously
Arts and Literary Editor of the Financial Times. She
trained as a junior reporter on local papers and went on
to work on several daily and Sunday newspapers including
the Evening Standard, where she was Arts Editor, theatre
critic and features writer. She has previously been a judge
for the Perrier Comedy Awards, the South Bank Show Awards
and the Forward Poetry Prize. She is the author of seven
children's books.
Suzanna Taverne attended Oxford University
where she studied Modern History. Currently Managing
Director of the British Museum, she has previously been Managing
Director of FT Finance, Consultant to the Chairman and Chief
Executive for Saatchi & Saatchi plc and Finance Director
of The Independent. She is married with two children
and serves as Vice-Chair of the Board for the National Council
for One Parent Families.
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