William St Clair

William St Clair, FBA, FRSL (born 1937) is a British historian, Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of English Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London, and author.

Biography

William St Clair received his education at Kilsyth Academy, Comely Park School, Falkirk, Edinburgh Academy, and St John's College, Oxford.

William St Clair started his academic career as Fellow of Royal Society of Literature in 1973[1] He was Visiting Fellow at All Souls College, Oxford in 1981–82. In 1985 he became fellow of Huntington Library, California. Since 1992 he is fellow of British Academy, and was Member of Council from 1996 to 2000. From 1992 to 1996 he was also fellow of All Souls College, Oxford University. In the year 1998–99 he was Visiting Fellow Commoner, Trinity College, Cambridge University. From 1999 to 2006 he was fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge University, 1999–2006[2] Since 2005 he is Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of English Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London. Since 2008 he is also Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for History and Economics, Cambridge and Harvard.

William St Clair is also chairman of Open Book Publishers, an academic publisher of peer-reviewed monographs in the humanities and social sciences since 2008.[3] Since 2008 he is also member of the Enterprise Management Committee, Re Enlightenment Project,[4] main partners New York University, New York Public Library, and University of Cambridge.

Work

His research interests lie, in large part, in the history of books and reading, ancient Greece and biography. His Reading Nation in the Romantic Period notably, received praise,[5] and was reviewed in over fifty scholarly journals;[6] it is frequently cited by other academics.[7] He is a founding member of Open Book Publishers, based in Cambridge (UK), and an active supporter of the Open Access movement.

Relating to the history of books and reading

Relating to the Parthenon and Elgin Marbles

History and biography

Conduct literature

Evaluation

As part of work in the Treasury, William St Clair authored:

British Civil Service

1960. Joined Admiralty. Spent time at sea in many types of vessel. Private Secretary to successive Civil Lords of the Admiralty in Conservative and Labour Governments.

1966. Transferred to Ministry of Defence. Secretary to the review of British defence arrangements at the end of empire. Visited military operations in Aden, South Arabia, Malaya, Borneo, and at sea. Visited virtually all British defence establishments.

1966–1969. First Secretary, Foreign Office, later Foreign and Commonwealth Office, on loan from Ministry of Defence. Desk officer for the Gibraltar dispute, later for East West trade and the strategic embargo. Served in Paris Embassy.

1969. Transferred to Treasury. Appointments concerned with public expenditure and international finance. Short appointment in Brussels as part of the team preparing for British entry to EEC.

1974. Promoted to Assistant Secretary. Appointed Head of Prices Division at the time of the inflationary surge, with responsibility for devising and operating the price and dividend controls associated with prices and incomes policy.

1978. Head of Industrial Policy Division. Helped to devise and operate the Callaghan/Healey industrial policy aimed at reviving British competitiveness in manufacturing. Treasury member of Monopolies and Mergers Panel, and of several industrial National Economic Development Committees.

1979. Head of Overseas Aid Division.

1982. Head of Superannuation Division. Responsible for the Principal Civil Service Pension Scheme and for Treasury supervision of the other public service pension schemes.

1985. Deputy Head of Cabinet Office/Treasury Joint Management Unit, charged with improving policy analysis and evaluation across government.

1985. Attended Top Management Programme for those entering the highest grades.

1988. Grade 4. In charge of the Treasury's consultancy forces, including inspectors, accountants, and operational researchers, and for deploying them across government

1990. Grade 3 Under-secretary with responsibility for Treasury control of the Civil Service.

1991–1998. Consultant to Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and European Union (EU). Assignments with British public bodies and overseas governments, advising mainly on strategic planning, resource allocation and budgeting, performance measurement, and evaluation.[10]

References

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