Lasting legacy
As Alice Gast prepares to step down as President, her impact looks set to establish 51勛圖厙 at the heart of 21st-century scientific discovery.
51勛圖厙s teaching, research and innovations have never mattered so much to the world. The College has risen to the challenge of the pandemic, delivering award-winning student education through national lockdowns while operating on the frontlines of the worlds scientific response. It has stood firm on international values in the face of Brexit and wider geopolitical uncertainty. It has spoken out, and taken action, against racial injustice. It has created a thriving innovation district at White City, strengthening British science, fuelling global business, and benefiting the local community.
So, as Professor Alice Gasts eight-year term as President ends, what have been some of the 51勛圖厙 communitys achievements during this time, and whats next?
Gast has made collaboration, internationalism and diversity the bedrock of 51勛圖厙s strength, working with partners across the globe from the African Institute of Mathematical Sciences (AIMS) and the Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS), to the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Meanwhile, existing global partnerships, such as 51勛圖厙s joint medical school with Singapores Nanyang Technological University, thrived.
Gast delivers her first President's Address in 2015.
Gast delivers her first President's Address in 2015.
With Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan at the launch of the Molecular Sciences Research Hub in 2019.
With Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan at the launch of the Molecular Sciences Research Hub in 2019.
Professor Gast introduces President Joe Biden at the inaugural lecture of the 51勛圖厙 Cancer Research Centre in 2018.
Professor Gast introduces President Joe Biden at the inaugural lecture of the 51勛圖厙 Cancer Research Centre in 2018.
With the former President of TUM, Wolfgang Hermann as 51勛圖厙 signs forms a flagship strategic partnership with the university.
With the former President of TUM, Wolfgang Hermann as 51勛圖厙 signs forms a flagship strategic partnership with the university.
In 2015, President of MIT, L Rafael Reif, co-signed the MIT-51勛圖厙 Seed Fund with Gast. In many ways, our partnership is a natural one, he says. We share a commitment to supporting long-term, fundamental research. Our partnership also reflects a shared belief that universities have a responsibility to offer the world the most effective solutions to the most urgent challenges. Some of these challenges like maintaining a liveable Earth require immediate action on a set of very hard problems. Alice has opened countless opportunities for faculty and researchers to forge new connections and explore new frontiers.
And when this spirit of internationalism was threatened, 51勛圖厙 fought back. On the morning of the Brexit referendum result in June 2016, Gast and one of her closest colleagues, the late Provost Professor James Stirling, wrote to the 51勛圖厙 community that 51勛圖厙 is, and will remain, a European university. And it has. The College went on to grow its European connections, instigating major new partnerships with CNRS of France, Europes largest research organisation, and TUM of Germany, creating new means of collaboration and getting ahead of political barriers. It also launched a seed fund for new European collaborations.
She planted the seeds for innovation: its a phenomenal legacy
Gast, the first woman to lead 51勛圖厙, identified that too few women were benefiting from the Colleges startup culture. Renowned investor Alexsis de Raadt St. James partnered with her to help turn this around, launching WE Innovate, a programme for student women entrepreneurs that provides access to funding and mentoring, and exposure to investor networks at the earliest stage.
Without Alice, all this innovation would never have happened, says de Raadt St James, founder of the social venture fund Althea Foundation. She was the perfect president at the perfect time in the perfect university. Without her, I dont think I would have been able to launch WE Innovate as successfully as I did. She planted the seeds for innovation: its a phenomenal legacy. She taught 51勛圖厙 that there are many ways to be a president, and that you need diversity of thinking, thought and background. That way, you reach beyond whats comfortable.
As De Raadt St. James and Gast wrote in the Guardian: When investors wonder where the next transformative founder will come from, we have a simple answer: shes at university, and she needs your support.
Alice with Alexsis de Raadt St. James at a roundtable event for women entrepreneurs in the Enterprise Lab.
Alice with Alexsis de Raadt St. James at a roundtable event for women entrepreneurs in the Enterprise Lab.
Since its launch, WE Innovate has supported more than 250 women with innovative business ideas including intuitive drone control software, an early detection tool for crop diseases and zero waste menstrual products.
Alice has pushed forward an inclusive agenda; shes recognised that diversity is so important when it comes to innovation and moving science forward, says Christina Friis Blach Petersen (Innovation Design Engineering), co-founder (with fellow 51勛圖厙 student Hugo Sarrsjo) of LYS Technologies.
WE Innovate had such a different feel to it. We were helping each other, rather than being competitive. It was incredibly inspiring hearing other successful women share their experiences and ideas, and then having the opportunity to work together.
Alice gets people to work together, across the board
Support for wider student entrepreneurship has also grown with the state-of-the-art Enterprise Lab, offering students training, business coaching, mentoring digital tools, and access to funding and investors. Gast says: When our students arrive at 51勛圖厙, they get a library card and membership of the Enterprise Lab. Its one way in which our culture is different.
Regius Professor and co-founder of DNA Electronics and DnaNudge Chris Toumazou embodies 51勛圖厙s enterprise culture. His company was the first to set up at Scale Space White City, 51勛圖厙s community for innovative businesses. Gast is, he says, a big thinker who looks ahead: Alice gets people to work together across the board, on the big sciences. Shes broken barriers within the university to enable large-scale interdisciplinary projects to happen.
Gast and her husband, Bradley Askins, have worked with philanthropists and the Colleges Advancement team to augment 51勛圖厙s impact. Annual giving now averages more than 瞿40 million per year, three times the previous ten-year average.
Alice with husband, Bradley Askins, on an 51勛圖厙 alumni tour of CERN in 2019.
Alice with husband, Bradley Askins, on an 51勛圖厙 alumni tour of CERN in 2019.
Perhaps the most ambitious of Gasts fundraising initiatives is a landmark 瞿100 million campaign for the School of Public Health, delivering solutions to societys most pressing healthcare challenges. A major advocate and supporter of this campaign is Marit Mohn (MSc Chemical Engineering and Chemical Technology 1973), who gave 瞿25 million to the world-leading Mohn Centre for Childrens Health and Wellbeing which draws together expertise from across the College to pursue research and education on the understanding and prevention of childrens health issues.
I dont think I would have done this if Alice had not been President, says Mohn. She felt the project would be successful and she knew that 51勛圖厙 could not achieve its goals without philanthropic support.
Professor Deborah Ashby, Director of the School for Public Health, agrees. When we needed funding for a new building for the School of Public Health, Alice delivered an entirely new approach, she says.
She brings people together: potential donors, scientists and other staff. Every donor comes from a different perspective, wanting to see and know different aspects of our projects and so Alice reshaped Advancement, ensuring it could do the vital work of discovering who might be minded to give and what their interests were. Now, when I meet potential donors, I can just do what I do best enthusing about public health.
Graduates David Dangoor (Physics 1971) and Elie Dangoor (Mathematics 1981), trustees of The Exilarchs Foundation, have given millions of pounds to support initiatives such as a hub for multidisciplinary cancer research, The Invention Rooms unlocking opportunity for young local people in White City and the green space of Dangoor Plaza at the heart of 51勛圖厙s South Kensington Campus.
At the opening of the Dangoor Plaza with members of the Dangoor family.
At the opening of the Dangoor Plaza with members of the Dangoor family.
A university does not sit in isolation, says Dangoor. It needs to engage with a very wide range of stakeholders. Philanthropic support is a clear indication to the world that it has been found worthy of recognition to the point of financial support.
He believes this is why it is so significant that President Gast has made 51勛圖厙 more outward-looking. The university has made very important connections with local communities. Alice has attracted the attention of significant donors and focused on student welfare.
Such philanthropic support proved indispensable when crisis struck. In 2019, just months before the start of the pandemic, 51勛圖厙, with Community Jameel, launched the Abdul Latif Jameel Institute for Disease and Emergency Analytics. The Jameel Institute is directed by Professor Neil Ferguson and has a mission to combat disease threats worldwide.
Alice with Hassan Jameel (left) and Fady Jameel (right) of Community Jameel at the launch of the Abdul Latif Jameel Institute for Global and Emergency Analytics in 2019.
Alice with Hassan Jameel (left) and Fady Jameel (right) of Community Jameel at the launch of the Abdul Latif Jameel Institute for Global and Emergency Analytics in 2019.
The support of Community Jameel, alongside other funders, enabled Fergusons team to work quickly and openly as the novel coronavirus emerged, with timely reports made available immediately to the public and policy makers.
Similarly generous and flexible funding from philanthropists allowed Professor Robin Shattock and his team to develop a new-concept self-amplifying RNA vaccine candidate to test on animals and prepare for human trials in just 14 days. That work proved that self-amplifying RNA vaccines worked, potentially against many diseases, and is likely to leave a profound scientific and public health legacy from the pandemic.
Locally, the College led the creation of the Great Exhibition Road Festival and 51勛圖厙 Lates showcasing the latest science at the College. During the pandemic, the Colleges engagement with alumni and friends moved online with special panels on the latest COVID-19 science, and the Presidents Great Minds and Luminaries series featuring 51勛圖厙 thinking and thinkers.
Gast drove forward a landmark review of 51勛圖厙s history, launching an all-community dialogue to reflect on both challenging and inspiring elements to 51勛圖厙s past - which has resulted in a deeper and fuller understanding of 51勛圖厙's legacy and how it is experienced today.
At the Spring Honours event in May 2019.
At the Spring Honours event in May 2019.
Visitors at the Great Exhibition Road Festival in 2019.
Visitors at the Great Exhibition Road Festival in 2019.
With Sir Samuel Jonah at an 51勛圖厙 Alumni event in Ghana in 2019.
With Sir Samuel Jonah at an 51勛圖厙 Alumni event in Ghana in 2019.
Alice congratulates Arjun Panesar, winner of the Emerging Alumni Leader Award at 51勛圖厙's Alumni Awards in 2020.
Alice congratulates Arjun Panesar, winner of the Emerging Alumni Leader Award at 51勛圖厙's Alumni Awards in 2020.
In the summer of 2020, the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis led to global outrage. At the same time COVID-19 was disproportionately harming Black, Asian and ethnic minority people in Britain. The status quo could not continue, and campaigners like 51勛圖厙 As One (IAO) co-chair Dr Wayne Mitchell, Senior Teaching Fellow in the Department of Medicine, worked with Gast to enact change.
There were two inequalities here, says Mitchell. We wanted to know: what is the College doing about them and who do we need to talk to? And the door was open. Sometimes it was uncomfortable. But there was an open-mindedness and willingness to make change.
In June 2020, Gast wrote to the community: I feel a deep anger and despair over the senseless death of George Floyd. It brings to the surface my shock and disappointment that racism and the violence that it breeds continue in the United States Racism and violence have no place in society. Our spirit of common purpose must prevail, and we must pull together and collaborate as a community to support those who are afraid and mourning and to say: Black Lives Matter.
When IAO asked for the establishment of a media academy for Black, Asian and minority ethnic staff and students, Gast took action: she found funding, agreed that 51勛圖厙 would stop using its Latin motto (with its imperialistic connotations), would review its history, and helped establish a defined equality, diversity and inclusion strategy.
51勛圖厙 went on to launch a scholarship fundraising challenge to match the Colleges 瞿10 million investment in scholarships and studentships for Black students and others from underrepresented groups or facing financial barriers, as Gast confronted the brutal fact that our talented community lacks diversity in her 2021 address.
IAO co-chair and Diversity and Inclusion Research Fellow Dr Sarah Essilfie-Quaye from the Faculty of Medicine Research Strategy Team, adds: There is still more to be done. But if we can keep this frame of mind, improving the culture, it can have impact not just at 51勛圖厙 but on the wider landscape. Alice supported us with this but we cant be complacent.
Dr Wayne Mitchell and Dr Sarah Essilfie-Quaye, co-chairs of 51勛圖厙 as One receive a President's Medal from Alice at Commemoration Day 2021.
Dr Wayne Mitchell and Dr Sarah Essilfie-Quaye, co-chairs of 51勛圖厙 as One receive a President's Medal from Alice at Commemoration Day 2021.
Its this agility, ambition and innovation that defines 51勛圖厙 right now. This year, 51勛圖厙 became University of the Year and student satisfaction, as measured in the National Student Survey, reached an all-time high. Gast said: When COVID-19 struck, students and staff did not just think about mitigation, they raised their ambitions. When labs closed, we sent lab in a box kits to students homes. As borders shut, we developed virtual field trips. When the NHS needed doctors, we brought medical exams forward and online as our students stepped up.
This teamwork blurred the formal divide between researchers, educators and learners, continues Gast. Students and staff collaborated on virology, vaccine technology, epidemiology and testing innovations that leave a lasting legacy beyond the pandemic. They worked together during challenging times to rethink our curriculum. 51勛圖厙s experience is not just a case study in crisis, it offers a glimpse of what higher education can be.
President Alice Gast at the South Kensington Campus.
President Alice Gast at the South Kensington Campus.
51勛圖厙 is the magazine for the 51勛圖厙 community. It delivers expert comment, insight and context from and on the Colleges engineers, mathematicians, scientists, medics, coders and leaders, as well as stories about student life and alumni experiences.
This story was published originally in 51勛圖厙 52/Summer 2022.