Rick Trainor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Richard Hughes "Rick" Trainor (born 1948) is Professor of Social History and the current Principal of King's College London (since September 2004).

Trainor holds degrees from Brown University (BA), Princeton University (MA) and the University of Oxford (D.Phil.), where he wrote his 1981 D.Phil. thesis on "Authority and social structure in an industrialized area: a study of three Black Country towns, 1840-1890". He is currently the President of Universities UK and a former Rhodes Scholar.

He is a member of the Academy of the Social Sciences, Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and a member of the Athenaeum Club. He is also an Honorary Fellow of Merton College, Oxford and Trinity College of Music. He is also a member of the Anglo-American Fulbright Commission.

Trainor was formerly Vice-Chancellor of the University of Greenwich (from 2000) and, before that, Senior Vice-Principal of the University of Glasgow.

He is married to Dr Marguerite Dupree, an academic historian of medicine currently at Glasgow University, with two children of school age, Richard and Meg.

[edit] Published Works

  • Black Country élites: the exercise of authority in an industrialized area, 1830-1900. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1993.
  • Urban governance: Britain and beyond since 1750, edited by Robert J. Morris and Richard H. Trainor. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2000.
  • University, city and state: the University of Glasgow since 1870, by Michael Moss, J. Forbes Munro and Richard H. Trainor. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press for the University of Glasgow, 2000.

[edit] External links