Alec Broers, Baron Broers

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Alec Nigel Broers, Baron Broers (born September 17, 1938) is an Anglo-Australian electrical engineer.

Broers was born in Calcutta, India and educated at Geelong Grammar School and Melbourne University in Australia, and then University of Cambridge (Gonville and Caius College) in England.

He then worked in the research and development laboratories of IBM in the USA for 19 years before returning to Cambridge in 1984 to become Professor of Electrical Engineering (1984-96) and Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge (1985-90). He is a pioneer of nanotechnology.

Broers subsequently became Master of Churchill College, Cambridge (1990-96) and Head of the Cambridge University Engineering Department (1993-96). He was Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge University, 1996-2003, knighted in 1998 and created a life peer in 2004, as Baron Broers, of Cambridge in the County of Cambridgeshire. Lord Broers is Chairman of the Science and Technology Committee of the House of Lords and was President of the Royal Academy of Engineering from 2001 to 2006.

[edit] Summary of important events in Alec Broers's life

  • 1938 Born September 17th in Calcutta, educated at Geelong Grammar School, Australia
  • 1959 Graduates in physics from Melbourne University, Australia
  • 1962 Graduates in electrical sciences from the University of Cambridge after arriving initially as a choral scholar
  • 1965 Completes PhD research at University of Cambridge
  • 1965 Researcher at IBM USA, later becoming an IBM Fellow and serving on the Corporate Technical Committee
  • 1984 Returns to Cambridge as Professor of Electrical Engineering
  • 1990 Master of Churchill College
  • 1992 Head of Cambridge University Engineering Department
  • 1996 Vice Chancellor, University of Cambridge (until 2003)
  • 1998 Knighted for services to education
  • 2001 President of The Royal Academy of Engineering
  • 2004 Granted a Life Peerage (became Lord Broers)
  • 2004 Becomes Chairman of the House of Lords Science and Technology Committee
  • 2005 Broers presents the Reith Lectures for the BBC

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Preceded by
Hermann Bondi
Master of Churchill College
1990–1996
Succeeded by
John Boyd
In other languages