David Donnison

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David Vernon Donnison (19 January 1926 – 28 April 2018) was a British academic and social scientist, who was Professor of Social Administration at the London School of Economics from 1961 to 1969, and Professor of Town and Regional Planning (1980–91) and Honorary Research Fellow (from 1991) at the University of Glasgow.

Career

Early life and education

David Vernon Donnison was born on 19 January 1926 at

Second World War, before going up to Magdalen College, Oxford, in 1947. He graduated three years later with a first-class degree in philosophy, politics and economics.[4]

Academia

Donnison was appointed to a lectureship at the

UN Economic Commission for Europe. He also studied education and served on the Plowden Committee on Primary Education in 1967, developing the concept of Educational Priority Areas with Michael Young.[2] From 1968 to 1970, he also chaired the Public Schools Commission, which reported on the financial state of public schools and then went on to investigate direct-grant grammar schools.[1][2]

In 1969, he left his chair at LSE and worked (until 1976) as director of a thinktank, the Centre for Environmental Studies. In the meantime, he joined the Supplementary Benefits Commission as deputy chairman in 1973 and two years later took over as chairman, serving until 1980.[2] The SBC was abolished by the Thatcher administration, but Donnison later recalled that its work entailed him meeting some of the poorest people in the country; for him, it was "radicalising" experience and he returned to studying poverty.[4] He was appointed Professor of Town and Regional Planning at the University of Glasgow in 1980. The regeneration of the city of Glasgow was underway in the 1980s and Donnison took a keen interest in it; he led the mid-term review of the GEAR project,[4] and, with Alan Middleton, edited Regenerating the Inner City: Glasgow’s Experience in 1987.[2] At the university, he also became the inaugural co-director of the Scottish Housing Research Group in 1982.[4]

By the time he retired in 1991 (he was thereafter an emeritus professor and honorary research fellow at Glasgow), Donnison had accumulated four honorary doctorates, from the universities of Bradford (1973), Hull (1980), and Leeds and Southampton (both 1981).[1] He received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Social Policy Association in 2008.[6] According to his obituary in The Guardian, Donnison was "one of a group of outstanding academics who played an important part in shaping social policy during the 1960s and 70s, and, in his case, well beyond. He remained engaged in public debate until the end of his life."[2] In the 1960s, he had controversially advocated that benefits should not be awarded at the discretion of civil servants, and that claimants should have statutory rights. He remained an advocate of marginalised groups for the rest of his life.[2]

Later life

In retirement, Donnison continued to write, authoring Policies for a Just Society (1997) and Speaking to Power: Advocacy for Health and Social Care (2009); but he was also a keen windsurfer, painter, draughtsman and poet, and he took up playing in a ceilidh band. He was well-settled in Scotland, and lived in Glasgow for the rest of his life, although he spent long periods of time on Easdale island. He died on 28 April 2018.[4]

Personal life

Donnison married Jean Kidger (died 2017), whom he had met at Oxford, in 1951. They separated in 1979 and he married the writer and activist Kay Carmichael (died 2009) in 1987. By his first wife, Donnison had two daughters (Rachel and Polly), two sons (Christopher and Harry) and a foster son (John), and with his second wife a step-daughter (Sheena).[4]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Donnison, David Vernon", Who's Who (online edition, Oxford University Press, December 2017). Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Howard Glennerster, "David Donnison obituary", The Guardian, 20 May 2018. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  3. ^ "Donnison, (Frank Siegfriend) Vernon", Who Was Who (online edition, Oxford University Press, December 2007). Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Duncan MacLennan and David Webster, "David Donnison, social policy expert whose research into poverty changed the lives of many", The Scotsman, 11 May 2018. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  5. ^ "Obituaries: David Donnison (C2 1940–43)", Old Marlburian Club, 22 May 2018. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  6. ^ The Social Policy Association Annual Awards: List of Past Winners (Microsoft Word document format) (Social Policy Association, 2016). Retrieved 3 June 2018.

Further reading