2017 New Year Honours

Last updated • 102 min readFrom Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia

The 2017 New Year Honours are appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms to various orders and honours to recognise and reward good works by citizens of those countries. The New Year Honours were awarded as part of the New Year celebrations at the start of January and were announced on 30 December 2016. [1]

Contents

The honours list reflected the United Kingdom's success at the 2016 Summer Olympics and Paralympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, with sports stars dominating the list. [2] [3] [4]

The recipients of honours are displayed as they were styled before their new honour and arranged by the country (in order of precedence) whose ministers advised The Queen on the appointments, then by honour with grades (i.e. Knight/Dame Grand Cross, Knight/Dame Commander, etc.), and then by divisions (i.e. Civil, Diplomatic, and Military, as appropriate).

United Kingdom

Below are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of the United Kingdom with honours within her own gift and with the advice of the Government for other honours. [5]

Member of the Order of the Companions of Honour (CH)

Knight Bachelor

Diplomatic Service and Overseas List

The Most Honourable Order of the Bath

Star and neck badge of a Knight Commander of the civil division of the Order of the Bath KCB civil star and badge.jpg
Star and neck badge of a Knight Commander of the civil division of the Order of the Bath

Knight / Dame Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB / DCB)

Civil Division

Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB)

Military Division
Royal Navy
Army
Royal Air Force
Civil Division
  • Michael Paul Bradley, Director General Resources, Defence Equipment and Support, Ministry of Defence. For services to defence.
  • Sarah Church, director, Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. For services to British food and farming.
  • Matthew Cyrus Coats, chief operating officer, Ministry of Justice. For public service.
  • Peter James Reginald Fish, Director General, Government Legal Department, Legal Adviser, Home Office. For legal services to government.
  • Jeremy Fleming, Senior Management, Ministry of Defence. For services to defence.
  • Professor Vernon Charles Gibson, lately Chief Scientific Adviser, Ministry of Defence. For services to defence.
  • Joy Hutcheon, Director General, Country Programmes, Department for International Development. For services to international development.
  • Sue McAllister, lately Director General, Northern Ireland Prison Service. For services to the Northern Ireland prison service.
  • Leo Columba Martin O'Reilly, Permanent Secretary, Department for Communities, Northern Ireland Executive. For services to government in Northern Ireland.
  • Annabel Clare Pillman OBE Director, Culture and Sport, Department for Culture, Media and Sport. For public and voluntary services.
  • Jonathan Michael Russell, HR Director, HR Services, Department for Work and Pensions. For services to the public sector and the community in Bishop's Stortford, Hertfordshire.
  • Dr Elizabeth Mary Hallam-Smith, lately Director of Information Services and librarian, House of Lords. For services to parliament and national heritage.
  • Michael Stevens, lately Head, Chief Scientist Office, Scottish Government. For services to research and healthcare and to the community in Edinburgh.
  • Michael Roger Williams, director, H.M. Treasury. For services to global tax policy and taxpayers.

The Most Distinguished Order of Saint Michael and Saint George

Knight / Dame Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George (KCMG / DCMG)

Diplomatic Service and Overseas List

Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG)

The Royal Victorian Order

Insignia of a Knight / Dame Commander of the Royal Victorian Order SteR KCVO.jpg
Insignia of a Knight / Dame Commander of the Royal Victorian Order

Knight / Dame Commander of the Royal Victorian Order (KCVO / DCVO)

Commander of the Royal Victorian Order (CVO)

Lieutenant of the Royal Victorian Order (LVO)

  • Lieutenant Colonel Oliver Raven St. John Breakwell MBE formerly Gentleman Usher to The Queen.
  • Pamela MacDonald MVO Payroll Manager, Household of The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall.
  • Nigel Robert McEvoy MVO RVM Assistant to the Master of the Household, Operations, Royal Household.
  • Paul Alexander Miller MVO IT Projects and Business Process Manager, Royal Household.
  • Melissa Sarah Morris MVO Secretary, Lord Chamberlain's Office.
  • Professor John Webster, formerly physician to The Queen in Scotland.

Member of the Royal Victorian Order (MVO)

  • David James Benefer, RVM , Plant shop manager/flower arranger, Sandringham Estate.
  • Nicholas Webster Booth, formerly chief executive officer, The Royal Foundation of The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry.
  • James Nicholas Geoffrey Bowden, CMG , OBE , Deputy Private Secretary for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs to The Prince of Wales.
  • Marianne Gaynor Brown, Principal Officer to the Lord-Lieutenant of Nottinghamshire.
  • John McKay Carmichael, Hairdresser to The Queen.
  • Kathryn Cuthbertson, Pastry Chef, Royal Household.
  • Ian Donald Dietrich Eaves. For services to the Royal Collection.
  • Jane Lesley Hayman, Cashier, Royal Collection Trust.
  • Alan John Kingshott, Chief Yeoman Warder, H.M. Tower of London.
  • Duncan Macdonald Lewis, formerly volunteer, The Prince's Trust.
  • Nicholas Andrew Loughran, formerly Deputy Communications Secretary to The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Henry of Wales.
  • Lynette Dorothy Mace, Manager of Household Operations, Government House, Canberra, Australia.
  • Jacqueline Elaine Mans, Pensions and Benefits Officer, Royal Household.
  • Jean Marjorie Potter, Assistant Clerk to the Lieutenancy of Wiltshire.
  • Gordon James Nixon Ritchie, Clerk to the Lieutenancy of Kincardineshire.
  • Frances Roche, Master Saddler, Royal Mews.
  • James Paul Roscoe, formerly Communications Secretary to The Queen.
  • David James Rough, RVM , Deputy Palace Foreman, Buckingham Palace.
  • Penelope Russell, Learning Manager, Royal Collection Trust, Windsor Castle.
  • Clare Helen Julie Shaw, Clerk to the Lieutenancy of Powys.
  • Sergeant Charles Henry Eric Sheppard, Metropolitan Police. For services to royalty protection.
  • Douglas William Squires, OBE . For services to choreography and stage direction, royal pageants.

Royal Victorian Medal (RVM)

Honorary

Bar to the Royal Victorian Medal (RVM*)

  • David Arthur Pithers RVM Gatekeeper, Home Park, Windsor.

The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire

Insignia of a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire KBE star and badge.jpg
Insignia of a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire

Knight / Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire (GBE)

Civil Division
  • Professor Sir Cyril Chantler, Emeritus Professor Guy's, King's, and St. Thomas's Medical School. For services to leadership in healthcare.

Knight / Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE / DBE)

Military Division
Royal Air Force
Civil Division
Diplomatic Service and Overseas List

Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE)

Military Division
Royal Navy
Army
  • Colonel Andrew John Pooler Barr OBE
  • Brigadier Jeremy Matthew James Bennett OBE
  • Brigadier Andrew Michael Cliffe
  • Brigadier Ludwig Karl Ford MBE
  • Brigadier Andrew Gordon Hughes MBE
Royal Air Force
  • Group Captain Damian Robert Alexander
  • Group Captain Richard Paul Barrow OBE
  • Air Commodore Keith Hugh Robert Bethell
Civil Division
  • Cecilia Akrisie Anim, President, Royal College of Nursing and clinical nurse specialist in women's health. For services to women's health.
  • Naim Ibrahim Attallah, publisher, Quartet Books. For services to literature and the arts.
  • Chris Brian Austin, Country Director, Afghanistan, Department for International Development. For services to international development.
  • Professor Polina Bayvel, Professor of Optical Communications and Networks, University College London. For services to engineering.
  • Hardip Singh Begol, director, Independent Education, Safeguarding in Schools and Counter Extremism, Department for Education. For services to education.
  • Professor Kamaldeep Singh Bhui, Professor of Cultural Psychiatry and Epidemiology, Wolfson Institute of Preventative Medicine, Queen Mary University of London. For services to mental healthcare.
  • Dr Desmond Rollo Biddulph, President and Member, Buddhist Society. For services to interfaith relations.
  • Sue-Anne Hilbre Biggs, Director General, Royal Horticultural Society. For services to the environment and ornamental horticulture industry.
  • Rosaleen Mary Blair, founder, Alexander Mann Solutions. For services to business and recruitment.
  • Michael Neil Murray Boyd, lately managing director, Investment, UK Trade and Investment, Department for International Trade. For services to international business.
  • Marie Brennan, Crown Commercial Leader, Cabinet Office. For services to commercial capability in the public sector.
  • Peter Brookes, cartoonist. For services to the media.
  • Professor Richard Burdett, Professor of Architecture and Urban Studies, London School of Economics. For services to urban planning and design.
  • Clare Beatrice Chamberlain, Director of Children's Services, Hammersmith and Fulham, Kensington and Chelsea, and City of Westminster. For services to children and families.
  • Professor Paul Charles Cheshire, economist. For services to economics and housing.
  • Sophie Margaret Christiansen OBE . For services to para-equestrianism.
  • Andrew George Christie, lately Director of Children's Services, Triborough (Hammersmith and Fulham, Kensington and Chelsea and Westminster Local Authorities). For services to children.
  • Professor Jack Martin Cuzick, Director, Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine and Head, Centre for Cancer Prevention. For services to cancer prevention and screening.
  • Professor Susan Catherine Deacon, Chair, Institute of Directors in Scotland and Assistant Principal, University of Edinburgh. For services to business, education and public service.
  • Professor Michael Harold Depledge, Chair of Environment and Human Health, University of Exeter Medical School. For services to the environment and human health.
  • Kim Daniel Bromley-Derry, Chief Executive, London Borough of Newham. For services to local government.
  • Stephen Roderick Dodgson, lately Head of Business Group, UK Export Finance, Department for International Trade. For services to the British export economy.
  • Philip James Duffy, chief operating officer, Border Force, Home Office. For services to immigration policy and border security.
  • Charlotte Susan Jane Dujardin OBE . For services to equestrianism.
  • Gerard Elias QC , Commissioner for Standards, National Assembly for Wales. For services to standards of conduct in public life.
  • Ronald Victor Emerson, lately chairman, British Business Bank. For services to international banking and the financing of small and medium-sized enterprises.
  • Dr Andrew Douglas Garrad. For services to renewable energy.
  • Robert Michael Gilbert, Chair, Intellectual Property Office. For services to the legal profession and the economy.
  • Neena Gill, Member of the European Parliament for the West Midlands. For parliamentary and political service.
  • Professor Peter John Goodhew, Emeritus Professor of Engineering, University of Liverpool. For services to engineering and education.
  • Rupert Goold, artistic director, Almeida Theatre. For services to drama.
  • Ravindra Pragji Govindia MBE , Leader, Wandsworth Borough Council. For services to local government and the community in Wandsworth, London.
  • Professor Anthony Clifford Grayling. For services to philosophy.
  • Professor Christopher Haslett OBE FRSE , Sir John Crofton Professor of Respiratory Medicine and director, Queen's Medical Research Institute, University of Edinburgh. For services to medical research.
  • Helena Rebecca Herklots, Chief Executive, Carers UK. For services to carers.
  • Anya Hindmarch MBE , Fashion Accessories Designer. For services to fashion.
  • Alfred Henry Hitchcock QPM , Chief Constable, Ministry of Defence Police. For services to defence and policing.
  • Councillor David Hodge, leader, Surrey County Council and vice-chairman, Local Government Association. For services to local government and charity.
  • Edmund Nigel Ronald Hosker, lately Director, International Energy, EU and Resilience, Department of Energy and Climate Change. For services to energy policy.
  • Shirley Hughes OBE , Author and Illustrator. For services to literature.
  • Dr Stephen Charles Inglis, lately Director, National Institute for Biological Standards and Control, Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency. For services to health protection.
  • Amanda Jeffery, Deputy Director, Judicial Office of England and Wales. For services to the administration of justice and the judiciary.
  • Dominic Johnson, Associate Treasurer, Conservative Party. For political service.
  • Roselyn Christine Jones, Mayor, Doncaster Council. For services to local government.
  • Professor Janice Margaret Kay, Provost and Senior Deputy Vice-Chancellor, University of Exeter. For services to higher education.
  • Jason Francis Kenny OBE . For services to cycling.
  • Laura Rebecca Kenny OBE . For services to cycling.
  • Sascha Kindred OBE . For services to swimming.
  • Professor Nicola Mary Lacey FBA , School Professor of Law, Gender and Social Policy, London School of Economics. For services to law, justice and gender politics.
  • Angela Macdonald, director, DWP Operations, Department for Work and Pensions. For services to welfare reform.
  • Mark Malcomson, Principal and Chief Executive, City Lit. For services to adult education.
  • Dr Jane Elizabeth Martin, Local Government Ombudsman and Chair, Commission for Local Administration in England. For services to administrative justice and transparency in local government.
  • Professor Paul William Martin, Depute Principal, University of the West of Scotland. For services to healthcare and education.
  • Professor Colin Peter Mayer, Member, Competition Appeal Tribunal. For services to business education and the administration of justice in the economic sphere.
  • Dr Donald McCarthy. For services to business and philanthropy.
  • Derek Andrew McClure. For services to mental healthcare and people with learning disabilities.
  • Gerard McGinn, Chairman, Strategic Investment Board. For services to the Northern Ireland economy.
  • Oliver Charles Fenton Morley, Chief Executive, Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency. For services to public sector digital services.
  • The Right Honourable Francis Mulholland QC , lately Lord Advocate. For services to law in Scotland.
  • Malcolm Newsam, lately Children's Social Care Commissioner, Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council. For services to children's social care.
  • Seamus Michael Oates, chief executive officer and Executive Headteacher, Tri-borough Alternative Provision Multi Academy Trust. For services to education.
  • Chris Ofili, Artist. For services to art.
  • Professor Jill Pell FRSA , Henry Mechan Professor of Public Health, University of Glasgow. For services to public health research.
  • Roger John Pope, Chief Executive Officer, Academies South West Multi Academy Trust and Executive Principal, Kingsbridge Community College, Devon. For services to education.
  • Michael Patrick Pragnell, Chairman, Cancer Research UK. For services to cancer research.
  • Professor John Adrian Pyle, Professor of Chemistry and 1920 Chair for Physical Chemistry, Cambridge University. For services to atmospheric chemistry and environmental science.
  • Timothy Robert Reddish OBE , Chair, British Paralympic Association. For services to sport.
  • Nigel Paul Richardson, lately Director of Children's Services, Leeds City Council. For services to children and families.
  • Angela May Rippon OBE , Development Lead, Dementia Friendly Communities. For services to dementia care.
  • Luke Philip Hardwick Rittner, Chief Executive, Royal Academy of Dance. For services to the arts, particularly dance.
  • Justine Juliette Alice Roberts, co-founder and chief executive officer, Mumsnet and Gransnet. For services to the economy.
  • Paul Rowsell, Deputy Director, Democracy, Department for Communities and Local Government. For services to local government.
  • Anne Richardson Sharp, Chief Executive, Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service. For services to workplace relations.
  • Dr Christopher John Simpkins, Director General, The Royal British Legion. For services to the Armed Forces community.
  • Jeremy Theodorson Sinclair, Chairman, M&C Saatchi. For services to advertising.
  • Nicholas David Skelton OBE . For services to equestrianism.
  • Professor Carol Christine Smart, Professor Emerita of Sociology, University of Manchester and lately Co-Director, Morgan Centre for the Study of Relationships and Personal Life. For services to the social sciences.
  • Professor David Burton Smith, writer, broadcaster and arts administrator. For services to culture and the arts in Wales.
  • Professor John Rason Spencer QC , Professor Emeritus, University of Cambridge. For services to the reform of law concerning child witnesses.
  • Lesley Sundstrom, Senior Management, Ministry of Defence. For services to defence.
  • Professor Anita Thapar, Clinical Professor, Institute of Psychological Medicine and Clinical Neurosciences, Cardiff University. For services to child and adolescent psychiatry.
  • Professor Hywel Rhys Thomas. For services to academic research and higher education.
  • Jennifer Waldman, director, 14–18 NOW, Imperial War Museum. For services to the arts.
  • Simon Edward John Walker, lately Director General, Institute of Directors. For services to business and the economy.
  • William Graeme Wallace, director, DWP Operations, Department for Work and Pensions. For services to pensioners and welfare reform.
  • Professor Geraldine Walters, lately Director of Nursing and Midwifery, King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust. For services to nursing and midwifery.
  • Dr David Watson, director, IBM Research UK. For services to science and engineering research.
  • Edward Webb, lately Deputy Director, Tissue, Embryology, Donation and Sponsorship, Department of Health. For services to health science.
  • Professor Peter Leslie Weissberg, lately Medical Director, British Heart Foundation. For services to medical research and cardiovascular health.
  • Professor Steven George West, Vice-Chancellor, University of the West of England. For services to higher education.
  • Dr Margaret Ann Whalley MBE , lately Director of Research, Training and Development, Pen Green Training and Development Centre, Corby, Northamptonshire. For services to education.
  • Dr Margo Lorraine Whiteford, Chair, Spina Bifida Hydrocephalus Scotland. For services to healthcare and charity.
  • Richard Thomas George Winter. For voluntary services to international development through Save the Children and Merlin.
  • Professor Guang-Zhong Yang, director, Hamlyn Centre for Robotic Surgery. For services to biomedical engineering.
Diplomatic Service And Overseas List

Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE)

Military Division
Royal Navy
  • Commodore Alistair John Adams
  • Commander Alastair Neil Spencer Graham MVO
  • Captain (now Commodore) Thomas Edward Manson
  • Captain Philip Kenneth Milburn
  • Captain Simon Richard Petitt
  • Commander Judith Helen Terry
  • Commander Mark Adrian Williams
Army
  • Colonel Graham Nicholas Addley
  • Lieutenant Colonel Richard MacGregor Crombie, Royal Corps of Signals, Army Reserve
  • Colonel Jason Saul Etherington
  • Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Stuart Garner MBE The Yorkshire Regiment
  • Lieutenant Colonel Ingrid Elizabeth Hall, Adjutant General's Corps (Educational and Training Services Branch)
  • Colonel Richard Maurice Hayhurst
  • Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Charles Rule Heywood, Royal Tank Regiment
  • Lieutenant Colonel Toby Alfred Warde Ingram MBE The Royal Regiment of Scotland
  • Lieutenant Colonel James Ryan Knight MBE Royal Corps of Signals
  • Lieutenant Colonel Glyn David Cledwyn Llewellyn, The Royal Welsh
  • Lieutenant Colonel Nathan Magunda Sempala-Ntege, Royal Regiment of Artillery
Royal Air Force
  • Group Captain Andrew Charles Gudgeon
  • Wing Commander Nicholas John Knight
  • Group Captain James Grant Leggate
  • Group Captain Clive Andrew Montellier
  • Group Captain Daniel Jonathan Storr
  • Wing Commander Duncan Joseph George Stubbs
Civil Division
  • Jane Acklam, Executive Principal and chief executive officer, Moor End Academies Trust. For services to education.
  • Gail Adams, Head of Nursing, UNISON. For services to nursing and public healthcare.
  • Nicola Adams MBE For services to boxing.
  • Diane Aderyn, Director of Finance and Commercial Services, University of Bath. For services to higher education.
  • Susan Victoria Mary Aglionby DL For services to young people and the community in Cumbria.
  • Rosalind Margaret Alstead, Director of Nursing and Clinical Standards, Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust. For services to nursing.
  • Professor Vidal Ashkenazi, Founding Director and chief executive officer, Nottingham Scientific Ltd. For services to science.
  • Iman Abou-Atta, Founder, SCEME. For services to community cohesion.
  • Sally Elizabeth Bacon. For services to culture and young people.
  • Joe Baden, Founder, Open Book Project. For services to higher education.
  • Susan Baker, director, Time to Change. For services to mental health.
  • Stephen Neville Bates, Chief Executive, Bioindustry Association. For services to innovation.
  • Sheila Anne Battersby, Senior Policy Adviser, Cabinet Office. For services to civil society and community action in the north west of England.
  • Alison Sarah Baum, Founder and chief executive officer, Best Beginnings. For services to tackling child health inequalities.
  • Alison Linda Beane, Executive Headteacher, Mary Rose Academy, Cliffdale Primary Academy and Redwood Park Academy, Portsmouth and director, Solent Academies Trust. For services to education.
  • Jenny Beavan, costume designer. For services to drama production.
  • Victoria Caroline Beckham, fashion designer. For services to the fashion industry.
  • Susan Margaret Bennett, Head, St. Thomas Centre Nursery School, Birmingham. For services to education.
  • Professor Jacqueline Dunkley-Bent, Head of Maternity, NHS England. For services to midwifery.
  • Abdul Fazal Bhanji, Deputy Chair, University of London Board of Trustees. For services to education and young people.
  • Christopher Blythe, Chief Executive, Chartered Institute of Building, Bracknell. For services to the construction industry and government.
  • Lynda Ann Bonner, Founder, National Nursing and Midwifery Nursing Network. For services to the treatment of venous thromboembolism.
  • Eleanor Deirdre Brazil, Children's Services Commissioner, Slough. For services to children's social care.
  • Sarah Elizabeth Brennan, Chief Executive, Young Minds. For services to children and young people's mental health.
  • Patrick Brill, artist. For services to the arts.
  • Sonia Penny Briscoe MBE Chef de Mission, Rio 2016 Paralympic Games. For services to sport.
  • Sharon Marie Broome, Principal Forensic Investigator, Defence Science and Technology Laboratory. For services to defence.
  • Sarah Browne, Assistant Director, South Eastern Health and Social Care Trust. For services to the social care sector in Northern Ireland.
  • Colin Edward Jarrom Bryan, chief executive officer, Drayton Manor Theme Park. For services to charity and the community in Staffordshire.
  • Trevor Arthur Stanley Buchanan, Consultant Ophthalmic Surgeon, Royal Victoria Hospital Belfast. For services to healthcare in Northern Ireland and voluntary medical service in South Sudan.
  • Dr Bernard Joseph Bulkin. For services to the energy industry.
  • Julie Beverly Bullous, lately Executive Headteacher, Federation of Mary Howard and St. Andrew's Primary School, Tamworth, Staffordshire. For services to education.
  • Joanna Briant Burgess, Principal and Founder, Blossom House School, London. For services to children with special educational needs and disabilities.
  • Professor Claire Sorrel Callender, Professor of Higher Education Policy, Birkbeck University of London and Professor of Higher Education Studies, UCL Institute of Education. For services to education.
  • James Ronald Carr. For services to conservation, education and the community in Cumbria.
  • Michael Douglas Carr, lately board member, Innovate UK and non-executive director, Ordnance Survey. For services to innovation.
  • Michael Cavanagh. For services to sport and the Commonwealth Games movement.
  • Kathryn Cearns, lately Chair, Financial Reporting Advisory Board. For voluntary services to government financial reporting.
  • Emma Jane Mary Chamberlain, Barrister and Author. For services to government tax policy.
  • Dr Steven William Chase, Director of People, Thames Valley Police. For services to policing.
  • Edward Clancy MBE For services to cycling.
  • Dr Jonathan Clark, Executive Headteacher, Beckmead Family of Schools, Croydon. For services to children with special educational needs and disabilities.
  • Christopher Patrick Coleman, Manager, Wales national football team. For services to football.
  • Kim Lucille Considine, lately Head of North West Protected Persons Service, TITAN Regional Organised Crime Unit. For services to vulnerable victims and witnesses.
  • Christopher John Cook, Chairman, Lincolnshire Local Safeguarding Children Board. For services to children.
  • Janet Cooper, Partner, Tapestry Compliance. For services to equality, women's empowerment and employee share ownership.
  • Teresa Ann Cooper, Grade 7, Ministry of Defence. For services to defence acquisition.
  • Donna Alison Cornwell, Associate Headteacher, Swaffham Bulbeck Church of England Primary School, Cambridge. For services to education.
  • Stuart John Cornwell, Chair, A Way Out, and Chair, Spurgeons Child Care and Chair of the Advisory Panel, Safe Families for Children. For services to children and families.
  • Charles Counsell, Executive Director, Automatic Enrolment, The Pensions Regulator. For services to workplace pension reform.
  • Angela Mary Cox, Diocesan Director for Education, Roman Catholic Diocese of Leeds. For services to education.
  • Christine Janette Craik, Director of Occupational Therapy, Brunel University. For services to occupational therapy, particularly mental health services and education.
  • Dr Helen Mary Crews, lately Director, Animal and Plant Health Agency. For services to plant and bee health and voluntary services to the community in York.
  • Jody Alan Cundy MBE For services to cycling and swimming.
  • Professor Valentine David Cunningham, lately Professor of English Language and Literature, Corpus Christi College Oxford. For services to services to scholarship and understanding of humanities.
  • Arthur Terry Dafter, lately Director of Adult Social Care, Stockport Council. For services to children's and adult social care.
  • Dr Siriol David (Siriol Chapman), lately Head of Forensic Psychological Services, National Offender Management System Wales. For services to offender management.
  • Ian Norman Dodds, Senior Policy Adviser, Cabinet Office. For services to civil society and community action in the north east of England.
  • Anne Marie Duffy, lately Director of Qualifications, Council for the Curriculum, Examinations and Assessment. For services to education in Northern Ireland.
  • Anne Patricia Dunham MBE For services to para-equestrianism.
  • Professor Mary Elizabeth Dunning, lately Governor, Tyne Metropolitan College. For services to further and higher education and the community in the north east of England.
  • Ciara Eastell, lately President, Society of Chief Librarians. For services to public libraries.
  • Dr Carole Easton. For services to young people.
  • Toby Hal Michael Eccles, Social Investor and Founder, Social Finance. For services to social enterprise and investment and charity.
  • Dr Katy Emck, Founding Director, Fine Cell Work. For services to the rehabilitation of offenders.
  • Jonathan Mark England, Chef de Mission, Team GB and Director of Sport, British Olympic Association. For services to sport.
  • Professor Gene Solomon Feder, General Practitioner, Helios Medical Centre, Bristol and Professor of Primary Care, University of Bristol. For services to healthcare and victims of domestic abuse.
  • Amanda Foister, chief executive officer, Longridge Activity Centre, Buckinghamshire. For services to young people.
  • Aminatta Forna, author. For services to literature.
  • Jennifer Fowler, Senior Advisory Lawyer, Upper Tribunal (Administrative Appeals Chamber) H.M. Courts and Tribunal Service. For services to the administration of justice.
  • Alexander Clive Fox, chief executive officer, Shared Lives Plus. For services to social care.
  • Peter Alan Fox, leader, Monmouthshire County Council. For services to Cardiff capital region.
  • Michael John Foy, Regional Head for the Midlands and North West, Free Schools Capital Division, Education Funding Agency. For services to education.
  • Professor Simon Webster Frith, Tovey Professor of Music, University of Edinburgh. For services to higher education and popular music.
  • Professor John Anthony Furlong, Emeritus Professor of Education, Oxford University and Expert Initial Teacher Education Adviser for Wales. For services to research in education and government.
  • Brian John Russell Gale, Director of Policy and Campaigns, National Deaf Children's Society. For services to special educational needs.
  • Ryan Gander, artist. For services to contemporary art.
  • Margaret Gibson, lately Chief Executive, Women's Enterprise Scotland. For services to business and entrepreneurship.
  • Fiona Margaret Gilkison, Accelerated Payment Team Lead, H.M. Revenue and Customs. For services to tackling tax non-compliance and tax avoidance.
  • Kevin John Gilliland, Network and Sales Director, Post Office Ltd. For services to the post office and communities.
  • Jacqueline Giulianotti, Head, Allowance Office, Scottish Parliament. For parliamentary service.
  • Colin Glass, Senior Partner, Winburn Glass Norfolk. For services to business start-ups and entrepreneurship.
  • Samuel Bernard Goldblatt. For services to business and the community in Northern Ireland.
  • John Harry Martin Gosden. For services to horseracing and training.
  • James Christopher Gosling, Solicitor and Partner, Holman Fenwick Willan LLP. For services to the legal profession and maritime hostages.
  • Janet Frances Gough, lately Director, ChurchCare. For services to heritage.
  • David Ralph Gould, lately Executive Principal, ARK Boulton Academy, Birmingham and Regional Director (Secondary), ARK. For services to education.
  • Jane Ann Gray, Consultant Nurse. For services to homeless and vulnerable people in the Midlands.
  • Christopher Steven Green, Founder, White Ribbon Campaign. For services to equality.
  • Robert William Green, chief executive officer, Stonewall Housing. For services to LGBT communities.
  • Rosemary Greenlees, Executive Director, The Crafts Council. For services to the craft sector.
  • Imran Gulamhuseinwala, Global Lead for FinTech, Ernst and Young. For services to financial services.
  • Poonam Gupta, chief executive officer, PG Paper Company Ltd. For services to business and charity.
  • Richard Lionel Guy. For services to justice, mental health support and the community in Cambridgeshire.
  • Timothy Michael Haigh, trustee, Depaul International Development. For voluntary service to homeless people in the UK and particularly abroad.
  • Sheila Ann Hardwick, Senior Scientific Officer, Centre for Applied Science and Technology, Home Office. For services to forensic science.
  • Naomie Melanie Harris, actress. For services to drama.
  • Grant David Hearn, Joint Chair, Skills and Employment, London Enterprise Panel. For services to unemployed people in London.
  • Stephen Hill, chair, Action on Hearing Loss. For services to people with hearing problems and charity.
  • Andrew Triggs Hodge MBE For services to rowing.
  • Timothy Philip Hollingsworth, chief executive officer, British Paralympic Association. For services to sport.
  • Brian Richard Hooper, lately chief executive officer, Ambitions Academy Trust. For services to education.
  • Roma Cecila Anne Hooper, Founder and Chair, Prison Radio Association and co-Founder, Radio Feltham. For services to prisoners.
  • Elizabeth Claire Houghton, Co-founder and chief executive officer, Mint Velvet. For services to business and charity.
  • Professor Susan Elizabeth Hunston, Professor of English Language, University of Birmingham. For services to higher education and applied linguistics, English language teaching.
  • Kathryn Jacob, chief executive officer, Pearl and Dean. For services to the promotion of equality and diversity.
  • Dr Gaynor Carolyn Jeffery (Gaynor Perry), Assistant Director, EU Consumer Policy, Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy. For services to consumer rights.
  • Bernadette Jones, District Manager, DWP Operations, Department for Work and Pensions. For services to unemployed people in South East Wales.
  • Professor Peter Malcolm Jones, Independent Transport Commissioner. For voluntary services to national transport policy.
  • Rosemary Jones, Headteacher, Elfed High School, Buckley, Flintshire. For services to education.
  • Shirley Kennerson, Head of South Essex Local Delivery Unit, Ministry of Justice. For services to probation and criminal justice.
  • Alison Cristine Kervin, Sports Editor, Mail on Sunday . For services to sports journalism.
  • Naseem Aslam Khan, managing director, Jennings Motor Group . For services to the economy and charity.
  • Professor Paul Vincent Knight, Associate Medical Director, NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde. For services to geriatric healthcare.
  • Catherine Large, Deputy chief executive officer, Creative and Cultural Skills. For services to the creative economy.
  • John George Lelliott, lately Interim chief financial officer, The Crown Estate. For services to the crown estate and the voluntary sector.
  • Sara Jane Lewis, Head of Prosecutions, Metropolitan Police. For services to criminal justice services.
  • Nicholas Linfield, Grade 6, Ministry of Defence. For services to defence.
  • Nicholas Roald (Christopher) Logsdail, Founder and director, Lisson Gallery. For services to the arts.
  • Keith Loraine, Chief Executive, Isos Housing Group. For services to housing and the community in North East England.
  • Barry Martyn Lowry, director, IS Shared Services and Strategy, Northern Ireland Executive. For services to government services and the IT industry in Northern Ireland.
  • Professor Mary Ann Lumsden, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Glasgow. For services to women's health.
  • Elspeth MacDonald, lately Deputy Director, Criminal Justice, Scottish Government. For services to criminal justice.
  • James Lennox MacKenzie, violinist and lately chairman, London Symphony Orchestra. For services to music.
  • Dr Keith Alexander MacLean. For services to the energy industry.
  • Stephen David Maddock, Chief Executive, City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. For services to music, particularly in the West Midlands.
  • Dr Brinder Singh Mahon, chief executive officer, Nishkam School Trust. For services to education.
  • Ranald Mair, lately chief executive officer, Scottish Care. For services to social work and social care.
  • Philomena Margaret Marshall, Education Director and Trustee, Laidlaw Schools Trust and lately Executive Principal, Excelsior Academy, Newcastle upon Tyne. For services to education.
  • Clive Reginald Martin, lately Director, Clinks. For services to offenders and their families.
  • Carol Margaret McCall, Head of Civil Contingency Communications, Cabinet Office. For services to government civil contingency preparation and ceremonial planning.
  • Helen Elizabeth McCrory, actor. For services to drama.
  • Catherine Jane McCulloch, co-Director, Children's Parliament. For services to children's rights and wellbeing.
  • James Joseph McGonigle, District Manager, Department for Work and Pensions. For services to the Armed Forces Reserves and voluntary service to community sport in Haddington, East Lothian.
  • Angela McLernon, Chief Executive, Northern Ireland Practice and Education for Nurses and Midwives. For services to nursing.
  • Natasha Mesko, lately Head, Nepal Health Programme, Department for International Development. For services to humanitarian relief.
  • Caroline Miller, lately Director, One Dance UK. For services to the arts.
  • Susan Jill Miller, Head of Arts, Glasgow Life. For services to culture in Glasgow.
  • Tom Miskell, chair, Accent. For services to housing associations in North East England.
  • Dr Heather Anne Barrett-Mold. For services to horticulture, sustainable development and environmental conservation.
  • Hazel Caroline Moore, chairman and co-founder, FirstCapital. For services to entrepreneurship and innovation.
  • Darren James Mott, Director of Campaigning, Conservative Campaign Headquarters. For political service.
  • Professor Ghulam Jeelani Mufti, Professor of Haemato-oncology, School of Medicine, King's College London. For services to haematological medicine.
  • The Reverend Jennifer Susan Mullis, Assistant Director, Further Education and Legal Unit, Department for Education. For services to further education and to the community in York.
  • Ian Hamilton Munro, Group Chief Executive, New Charter Group. For services to housing.
  • Professor Rachel Anne Munton, lately managing director, East Midlands Academic Health Science Network. For services to healthcare.
  • Professor James Charles Neil, Professor of Virology and Molecular Oncology, University of Glasgow. For services to the advancement of biomedical sciences.
  • Professor Anne Neville, Royal Academy of Engineering Chair in Emerging Technologies, University of Leeds. For services to engineering.
  • James Henry Newman, lately Chair, Sheffield City Region Local Enterprise Partnership Board. For services to business, the economy and charity in Yorkshire.
  • Christopher David Newsome, director, Asset Management and Executive Director, Anglian Water. For services to civil engineering and carbon reduction.
  • Sheila Anne Nicoll, Head of Public Policy, Schroders. For services to financial services and voluntary service.
  • Julia Alice Nix, District Manager, Work Services Directorate, Department for Work and Pensions. For services to tackling youth unemployment in East Anglia.
  • Amanda Jane Nobbs (Mullarkey), Chair, Thames Regional Flood and Coastal Committee. For services to flood and coastal risk management and environment protection.
  • Carol Norman, Headteacher, Welbeck Primary School, Nottingham. For services to education.
  • Christopher Nott, Founder and Senior Partner, Capital Law LLP. For services to business and economic development in Wales.
  • Anthony Christopher O'Neill. For services to the agri-food sector in Northern Ireland.
  • Simon John Patrick, lately Principal Clerk of Select Committees, House of Commons. For parliamentary services.
  • Margaret Elizabeth Philbin, chief executive officer and Cofounder, TeenTech. For services to promoting careers in STEM and the creative industries.
  • Timothy Peter Pigott-Smith, actor. For services to drama.
  • Christopher Charles Pomfret. For services to the economy in Cornwall and South West England.
  • Thomas Stephen Potokar, founder, Interburns. For services to burns care and prevention abroad.
  • Shona Sands Powell, director, Nottingham Lakeside Arts. For services to the arts and education.
  • Lindsey Jane Pownall, lately Group chief executive officer, Samworth Brothers Ltd. For services to business growth and productivity.
  • Avtar Singh Purewal, Regional Head of Learning and Skills, H.M. Prison Service Yorkshire. For services to prisoners.
  • Dr Sharon Patricia Redrobe, chief executive officer, Twycross Zoo, East Midlands Zoological Society. For services to skills, science and the economy in Leicestershire.
  • Lieutenant Peter Reed MBE For services to rowing.
  • Professor John Van Reenen, economist. For services to economics and public policy making.
  • Professor Susan Margaret Rhind, Professor and Chair of Veterinary Education, The Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies. For services to veterinary education.
  • Professor Rosalind Jessie Richards, Head of International Study and Language Institute, University of Reading. For services to language support for international education.
  • Professor Teresa Margaret Ridge, Professor of Social Policy, University of Bath. For services to the social sciences.
  • Danny Rimer, Partner, Index Ventures and board member, Maggie's Cancer Caring Centres. For services to business and charity.
  • Michael Leonard Robbins, Principal, Bridgwater and Taunton College. For services to further education.
  • Robert Neil Robson, chief executive officer, The Royal Navy and Royal Marines Charity. For services to naval personnel.
  • Marva Rollins, Headteacher, Raynham Primary School, Edmonton, London. For services to education.
  • Caroline Ross, lawyer, Department of Energy and Climate Change. For legal services to international climate change negotiations.
  • Peter William Rowley. For services to sports administration.
  • Ailsa Margaret Rutter, director, FRESH Smokefree North East. For services to tobacco control.
  • Bernie Ryan, Directorate Manager, St. Mary's Sexual Assault Referral Centre, Manchester. For services to supporting people affected by sexual assault.
  • Lynn Caroline Saunders, Governor, H.M. Prison Whatton. For public and voluntary services to prisoners in the UK and abroad.
  • Bruce Stewart Shepherd, managing director, Shepherd Offshore. For services to the economy and skills in the offshore sector.
  • Ann Shepperd, Chief Executive, Salix Finance Ltd and Trustee, Lucy Faithfull Foundation. For services to energy efficiency and voluntary service to child protection.
  • Edward Martin Sherry. For services to young people and policing.
  • Marlene Elizabeth Shiels, Chief Executive, Capital Credit Union. For services to financial services and financial inclusion.
  • Jasvir Singh, Founding Chair, City Sikhs. For voluntary service to faith communities and social cohesion.
  • Kathleen Slack (Smith), director, Enterprise M3 Local Enterprise Partnership. For services to the economy and the community of South East England.
  • Robert Keith Sleigh, leader, Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council. For services to local government.
  • Air Vice Marshal Michael David Smart DL Vice-Chairman (Air), Council of Reserve Forces and Cadets Associations. For voluntary service to the Armed Forces and the ex-service community.
  • Chaya Spitz, Chief Executive, Interlink Foundation. For services to the community and Jewish people in London.
  • Alison Katherine Spurway, County Vice-President, City of Glasgow. For services to Girlguiding and charity.
  • Dr Arthur David Steiner, Founder and Executive Officer, Hands Around The World. For humanitarian services to disadvantaged children abroad.
  • Neil Robin Stock, leader, Tendring District Council. For services to local government.
  • John Andrew Straw, lately Chief Executive, City and County of Swansea Council. For services to local government.
  • Professor Deborah Ann Sturdy, Nurse Adviser, Care England. For services to older people, dementia care and nursing.
  • Charlotte Victoria Sweeney, director, Charlotte Sweeney Associates. For services to women and equality.
  • Mohammad Taj, President, TUC. For services to trade unionism.
  • Caroline Taylor, Vice-President for Global Marketing and Communications, IBM. For services to marketing, diversity and prevention of human trafficking.
  • Professor Keri Vivien Thomas, Founder and National Clinical Lead, National Gold Standards Framework Centre in End of Life Care. For services to end of life care.
  • Keith Christopher Thompson, Technical Adviser, Department for International Development. For services to humanitarian relief.
  • Jonathan Mark Paul Tibbs, Chairman, Jon Tibbs Associates Ltd. For services to international trade and the sports sector.
  • Crispin Marshall Truman, Chief Executive, The Churches Conservation Trust. For services to heritage and charitable foundations.
  • Paul Harold Valerio, President, Swansea West Conservatives. For services to Welsh devolution.
  • Professor David Glyn Vaughan, Glaciologist, British Antarctic Survey. For services to glaciology.
  • Caroline Wake, Head, UK Delegation, Channel Tunnel Safety Authority. For services to transport safety and the community in Kent.
  • Aileen Walker, lately Director of Public Engagement, House of Commons. For services to improving public engagement with parliament and voluntary service to the community in London.
  • Kathryn Louise (Kate) Richardson-Walsh MBE For services to hockey.
  • Dr Brian Derek Ward, Head, National Resilience Assurance Team. For services to the fire and rescue service and national resilience.
  • Hugh Wark. For services to transport and the economy in Scotland.
  • Dr Martin Stanley Warren, Chief Executive, Butterfly Conservation. For services to the environment.
  • Professor Sally Wheeler, Professor of Law and Head of the School of Law, Queen's University Belfast. For services to higher education in Northern Ireland.
  • Alastair Geoffrey Whitehead, lately Deputy Principal Private Secretary to the Home Secretary, Home Office. For public service and voluntary services to policing.
  • Graham Arthur Widdecombe, Joint Head of Firearms Licensing, Home Office. For services to public safety and reducing risk to the public through the misuse of legal firearms.
  • Dr Christoph Stefan Wiesner, Chief Executive, The Welding Institute. For services to engineering and innovation.
  • Danny Wilks, resourcing manager, West Yorkshire Police. For services to policing and voluntary services to justice and the community in West Yorkshire.
  • Professor Michael Alan Hewlett Williams, Chief Executive, Gwrp Gwalia Cyf. For services to health, housing and homeless people in Wales.
  • Dr Lorna Mcleod Williamson, lately Director, NHS Blood and Transplant. For services to the advancement of blood, tissue and stem cell donations.
  • Professor Anne Elizabeth Willis, director, MRC Toxicology Unit, Leicester. For services to biomedical science and promoting the careers of women in science.
  • Colum Wilson. For services to humanitarian relief.
  • Dr William Benjamin Wilson. For services to the voluntary and charitable sectors in Northern Ireland.
  • Christiane Wuillamie, managing director, Elegius Ltd. For services to business.
  • Alexander Featherstonehaugh Wylie, The Honourable Lord Kinclaven, Founder, MiniTrials. For services to the introduction of the Scottish legal system in schools.
  • Dr Hakim Yadi, chief executive officer, Northern Health Science Alliance. For services to healthcare technology and the economy.
  • Andrew George Young, actuary, The Pensions Regulator. For services to pension policy and pensioners.
Diplomatic Service and Overseas List
  • Andrew John Booth, Founder and chief executive officer, ABOUTAsia Travel and ABOUTAsia Schools, Cambodia; Author of The Angkor Guidebook. For services to children's education in Cambodia.
  • Jonathan Michael Dunn, British Consul General, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. For services to the British Olympic and Paralympic teams, and to the promotion of the UK.
  • Christopher John Ensor, First Secretary, Foreign and Commonwealth Office. For services to national security.
  • Maxwell Pearse Gandell, Senior Overseas Security Adviser, Estates and Security Directorate, Foreign and Commonwealth Office. For services to the security of H.M. government staff and missions overseas.
  • Ian Gray, Chairman, Egyptian British Business Council. For services to UK/Egypt trade relations.
  • Paul Guerin, Country Director, International Foundation for Electoral Systems, Burma. For services to promoting fair and democratic elections in Burma.
  • Dr Martin Andrew Longden, lately Deputy Head of Mission, British Embassy Kabul, Afghanistan. For services to British interests in Afghanistan.
  • The Honourable Norma Maria Wade-Miller, Supreme Court of Bermuda. For services to judicial services in Bermuda, and as president of the Commonwealth Magistrates and Judges association.
  • Dr Elspeth Clare Paterson, Obstetrician and Gynaecologist at Bach Christian Hospital, Pakistan. For services to healthcare for women in North West Pakistan.
  • Professor Ram Prasad (Robin) Sengupta, Chairman, Institute of Neuroscience, Kolkata. For services to people with neurological disease in the UK and India, and to the UK/India relationship.
  • Dr Adrian Mark Simper, Director Strategy and Technology, Nuclear Decommissioning Authority. For services to the UK nuclear industry in Japan.
  • Paul Benedict Smithwick, Lawyer. For services to British/Irish relations.
  • Hugo David Walkinshaw, Former President, British Chamber of Commerce, Singapore. For services to British business in Singapore and to UK exports.
  • The Honourable Alice Louise Walpole, H.M. Ambassador, Bamako, Mali. For services to British diplomacy.
  • Colonel Michael John Winarick, Honorary Treasurer, The Royal Commonwealth Ex-Services League. For services to Commonwealth veterans who have served in the British Armed Forces.

Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE)

Military Division
Royal Navy
  • Lieutenant Commander (now Commander) Kara Chadwick, Royal Navy
  • Petty Officer (Diver) Martin Doherty
  • Warrant Officer 1 (Medical Assistant) Peter Leslie Duncan
  • Warrant Officer 2 Mark Elfverson, Royal Marines
  • Warrant Officer 1 Philip Gilby, Royal Marines
  • Warrant Officer 1 Logistician (Supply Chain) Michael Hughes.
  • Lieutenant Commander (Acting Commander) Timothy Paul Briggsmould, Royal Navy
  • Lieutenant Commander Alun John Read, Royal Navy
  • Lieutenant Commander Nicholas Reed, Royal Navy
  • Warrant Officer 1 Craig Riach, Royal Marines
Army
  • Warrant Officer Class 2 Lorraine Anderson, The Royal Logistic Corps, Army Reserve
  • Major Andrew James Bourne, The Mercian Regiment
  • Major Thomas Andrew Watson Cairncross, The Rifles
  • Major Dale Martin Clarke, Royal Regiment of Artillery, Army Reserve
  • Major Vance Robert Thomas Crow, The Royal Irish Regiment
  • Captain Anthony Mark Dale, Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers, Army Reserve
  • Acting Lieutenant Colonel Mark Robert Sean Dillon TD Adjutant General's Corps (Royal Military Police), Army Reserve
  • Staff Sergeant Ian James Flannigan, Royal Corps of Signals
  • Staff Sergeant Christopher Michael Fowler, Intelligence Corps
  • Major Graham James Goodey, The Royal Anglian Regiment
  • Staff Sergeant Andrew Harrison, Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers
  • Major Christopher Ashley Head MC The Royal Regiment of Fusiliers
  • Colour Serjeant Mark Christopher Charles Holloway, The Rifles
  • Warrant Officer Class 1 Barry John Michael Hook, The Royal Logistic Corps
  • Sergeant Benjamin Ian Hughes, Corps of Royal Engineers
  • Major Mark Stuart Jones, Corps of Royal Engineers
  • Major Stephen John Killick, The Parachute Regiment
  • Warrant Officer Class 2 Mark Anthony Loader, The Parachute Regiment
  • Major Karol Adam Mamos MM The Parachute Regiment
  • Major Darren Keith McCleery, The Royal Irish Regiment
  • Captain Mark McDougall MC The Parachute Regiment
  • Sergeant Alex George Menya, Adjutant General's Corps (Staff and Personnel Support Branch)
  • Major Jonathan Patrick George Mills, The Rifles
  • Major Martin Patrick Morrissey, The Royal Lancers
  • Acting Sergeant Emmanuel Ikemefuna Ottih, The Royal Logistic Corps
  • Major Jake Simon Pounds, The Parachute Regiment
  • Major Frank Stanley Reeves, The Royal Regiment of Scotland
  • Sergeant Jonathan Michael Rigg, Royal Corps of Signals, Army Reserve
  • Staff Sergeant John Joseph Patrick Rock, The Royal Logistic Corps, Army Reserve
  • Major Robert Hugh Durnford O'Neil Roe, The Rifles
  • Major Andrew Christopher Ryan, The Mercian Regiment
  • Staff Sergeant Clare Ryan, The Royal Logistic Corps
  • Major Steven George Small, The Royal Regiment of Scotland
  • Acting Colonel Christopher Hugh Sharwood-Smith, Army Cadet Force
  • Acting Captain Verna Jacqueline Burrell-Taylor, Combined Cadet Force
  • Major Edward Patrick Thompson, Corps of Royal Engineers
  • Warrant Officer Class 2 Mathew John Tucker, Intelligence Corps
  • Captain David Trevor Martin Welford, The King's Royal Hussars
  • Major Simon David Whitaker, The Duke of Lancaster's Regiment
Royal Air Force
  • Warrant Officer Mark John Baker
  • Senior Aircraftman Thomas James Berry
  • Flight Lieutenant Crispin Nicholas Bond
  • Squadron Leader Shaun David Burton
  • Warrant Officer Alan David Cleminson
  • Squadron Leader Andrew Timothy Crichton, Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve (Training)
  • Senior Aircraftman Shayne Daniel Hadland
  • Squadron Leader Michael Richard Ling
  • Squadron Leader Duncan Charles Mason
  • Warrant Officer Karen Elizabeth Pinnion
  • Sergeant Gary David Robinson
  • Warrant Officer Francis Magnus Sinclair
  • Wing Commander Benjamin Philip Trapnell
Civil Division
  • Peter William Adams. For services to the community in Hampton-in-Arden, Solihull.
  • Timothy Lawrence Adams. For services to horseracing and rugby league.
  • Pastor Brian Cameron Agnew. For voluntary service to the community in Northern Ireland.
  • Jonathan Philip Agnew DL , Sports Broadcaster. For services to broadcasting.
  • Councillor Mohammed Aikhlaq, Chair of Governors, Leigh Primary School, Birmingham. For services to education.
  • John Allen. For services to athletics in Northern Ireland.
  • Imran Amed, Founder and chief executive officer and Editor-in-Chief, The Business of Fashion. For services to fashion.
  • Melanie Catherine Andrews, Director and Founder, The Scottish Baking Awards. For services to baking and to the community in Helensburgh.
  • Giselle Anne Ansley. For services to hockey.
  • Anjana Purnawaty Appiah, Foster Carer, Islington Council. For services to children.
  • Krushnah Appiah, Foster Carer, Islington Council. For services to children.
  • Katie Archibald. For services to cycling.
  • George Robert Arckless. For services to the community in Northumberland.
  • Colin Edward Armstrong, Head of International Resilience, Government Office for Science. For services to emergency response and voluntary service to community sport in Greenwich.
  • John Raymond Armstrong, managing director, Armstrong Medical Limited. For services to economic development in Northern Ireland.
  • Hollie Arnold. For services to field athletics.
  • Jacqueline Ann Aspinall. For services to young people through the scout movement in Wigan and Greater Manchester.
  • Professor Iain Douglas Baikie, chief executive officer, KP Technology. For services to the promotion of science education in Caithness.
  • Debra Tracy Ballard, Executive Officer, DWP Operations, Department for Work and Pensions. For services to homeless people in Southend-on-Sea.
  • Walter Balmford. For services to training and education.
  • Jacqueline Dale Banks, Manager, Asset Performance Environment Agency. For services to communities and flood risk management.
  • Sarah Jane Banks, Higher Executive Officer, Ministry of Defence. For services to the MoD disability network.
  • Elinor Jane Barker. For services to cycling.
  • Sally Ann Barker TD For services to sport and women's participation in sport.
  • Anthony John Lane Barnes. For voluntary services to the community in Etchingham, East Sussex.
  • Kenneth Andrew John Barrass, lately Chair, Rotherham and North Nottinghamshire College. For services to further education.
  • Stephen Bate. For services to cycling.
  • Squadron Leader Brian Quintin-Baxendale, lately Inwards Visits and Protocol Officer, DSO Events and Exhibitions Team, Department for International Trade. For services to UK defence industry exports.
  • William John Bayley. For services to table tennis.
  • Anthony Peter Bayon, Chair of Governors, Harris Academy Merton and Harris Academy Morton, and Member, Harris Federation Board. For services to education.
  • Salena Margaret Eileen Begley, Partnership (Scotland) Development Manager, The Family Fund. For services to children's welfare.
  • Jonathan Bernard Benjamin. For services to national campaigning on awareness of suicide and mental illness.
  • Diane Elizabeth Bennett. For services to young people in Evesham, Worcestershire.
  • Oliver Bennett, Senior Library Clerk, House of Commons. For services to supporting the democratic process of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar.
  • Paul Bennett. For services to rowing.
  • Sandra Biddle, director, Foyle School of Speech and Drama. For services to speech and drama in Northern Ireland.
  • Catherine Mary Blair, lately Director of Targeted and Specialist Children and Families Services, Islington Council. For services to children's social work.
  • Paul John Blake. For services to athletics.
  • Dorothy Blincoe. For services to the community in Clapham, South London.
  • Jonathan William Bloomer, lately Trustee and Honorary Treasurer, NSPCC. For voluntary services to children and young people.
  • Major Michael Thomas Bolderson, Senior Executive Officer, Ministry of Defence. For services in Support of the Defence Equipment and Support.
  • Dr Hilary Roberta Bollan, Senior Scientific Officer, Ministry of Defence. For services to submarine safety and the Royal Navy.
  • Tracey Booth, Chair of Governors, Churchill Community College, Wallsend, Tyne and Wear. For services to education.
  • Keith Andrew Bott, Partner, Titanic Brewery and chairman, SIBA. For services to the brewing industry and the economy in Staffordshire.
  • Debra Lyselte Bourne (Rosen), co-founder, All Walks Beyond the Catwalk. For services to diversity in the fashion industry.
  • Professor Deborah Bowman, Professor of Medical Ethics, St George's, University of London. For services to medical ethics.
  • Sophie Charlotte Bray. For services to hockey.
  • Dr Mary Claire Breay, Head of Ancient Medieval and Early Modern Manuscripts, British Library. For services to medieval history.
  • Guy Stephen Brigg, Deputy Headteacher, Dr Radcliffe's Church of England School, Oxfordshire. For services to education and to community in Oxfordshire.
  • Alexandra Kathleen Broadrick, lately Chief of Staff to the Conservative Party chairman. For political service.
  • Karen Lesley Brock, Founder, Tower Hamlets Arts and Music Education Service. For services to education.
  • Sharon Louise Broderick, Police Community Support and Traffic Officer, Merseyside Police. For services to community policing.
  • Daniel James Brown. For services to rowing.
  • Dorothy May Brown. For services to the community in Pinehurst and Parks, Wiltshire.
  • Irene Bruce, Assisted Communications Manager, Population Health Improvement Directorate, Scottish Government. For services to the improvement of access to public services.
  • Dr Steven Johnston Bruce. For voluntary service in Fife.
  • Maurice George Brunton. For voluntary service through Scouting.
  • Nigel George Bumphrey. For services to the church in Norfolk.
  • Alex Bunting. For services to the support of victims and survivors in Northern Ireland.
  • Candy Phillipa Burgess, Head of Pupil Services, Islington Council. For services to special educational needs.
  • Timothy Foster Burgess, chief executive officer, Foundation of Edward Storey. For voluntary services in Cambridgeshire.
  • Joanna Butterfield. For services to field athletics.
  • Jon-Allan Edward Butterworth. For services to cycling.
  • Joseph Cahill, Constable, West Midlands Police and Chair of Governors, Broadway Academy, Birmingham. For services to education and to the community in Birmingham.
  • Angela Cameron, Head of Counter Fraud and Whistleblowing Unit, Department for International Development. For services to international development audit.
  • Jacqueline Andrea Cameron, Diary Manager to the Secretary of State, Department for International Trade. For public service.
  • Jacqueline Ann Pestell-Canavan, Botanical Illustrator. For services to botanical art education in Scotland.
  • Karen Julia Carney, Winger, England Women's Football Team and Chelsea Ladies. For services to football.
  • Mark Michael Terence Casali, lately chief immigration officer, West London Operational Intelligence Unit, London and South Immigration Enforcement. For services to law and order.
  • Christine Elizabeth Dawn Casey. For services to victims of abuse.
  • Claire Cashmore. For services to swimming.
  • Tanya Catherine Castell, Founder chief executive officer, Changing the Chemistry. For services to diversity in business.
  • Keith George Caulkin, lately Physics Teacher, The Blue Coat School, Liverpool. For services to education.
  • Richard Cheetham, Senior Fellow in Sport Studies, University of Winchester. For services to education and community sport.
  • Jeanette Clare Chippington. For services to canoeing.
  • Surjit Singh Chowdhary, Vice-President, Central Gurdwara Singh Sabha, Glasgow. For services to the Sikh community and charity.
  • Robin Christopherson, Head of Digital Inclusion, AbilityNet. For services to digital inclusion.
  • Mike Smith-Clare. For services to the education of vulnerable and disadvantaged people in Norfolk through the Blue Cat Initiative.
  • Mary Elizabeth Clark. For services to charity and the community in Immingham, Lincolnshire.
  • Saskia Clark. For services to sailing.
  • Christopher Clarke. For services to sport.
  • Desmond Walter Robert Clarke. For services to the British public library service and literature.
  • Joe Clarke. For services to canoeing.
  • Sharon Delores Clarke, Actress. For services to drama.
  • Elizabeth Clegg. For services to athletics and charity.
  • Susan Margaret Clifford, Volunteer, Adoption UK. For services to children and families.
  • Roderick Clifton, Operations Support Manager, Valuation Office Agency. For services to council tax processes.
  • Grace Elizabeth Sorrel Clough. For services to rowing.
  • Captain Donald Patrick Cockrill, Secretary General, United Kingdom Maritime Pilots' Association. For voluntary services to maritime pilotage and the port industry.
  • Helen Cole, Principal, Ballykelly Primary School. For services to education.
  • Terry Peter Cole, Building Officer, House of Commons. For parliamentary service.
  • Michael Joseph Conway, chief executive officer, FM Conway. For services to UK construction, infrastructure support and road safety.
  • Graham Cook, Manager, Albin International Repatriation. For services to the armed forces.
  • Jennifer Cooke. For services to supporting people with neuro-disabilities.
  • Trevor Cooper, Chairman of Council, Ecclesiological Society. For services to ecclesiastical heritage.
  • Joanna Manning-Cooper. For services to sport.
  • Kadeena Cox. For services to athletics.
  • Penelope Sarah Cox, Headteacher, Holy Trinity Church of England Primary School, Richmond. For services to education.
  • Chay Crista Kerio Cullen. For services to hockey.
  • Stella Cummings, Northern Ireland Vice-President, British Red Cross. For voluntary service to First Aid and the community in Northern Ireland.
  • David Edward Cussons. For services to agriculture and rural communities in North Yorkshire particularly through the Ryedale Agricultural Show.
  • Alan Cutler. For voluntary service to geological conservation particularly in the Black Country.
  • Basil Dalton, Head of School, North West Regional College. For services to further education in Northern Ireland.
  • Alexandra Danson. For services to hockey.
  • Roy Matthew Dantzic, lately Deputy Chair, Architectural Heritage Fund. For services to architectural heritage.
  • Karen Darke. For services to sport, particularly cycling and triathlon.
  • Jane Carr Davidson, director, Outreach and Education, Scottish Opera. For services to opera and education.
  • Iestyn Davies, Classical Countertenor. For services to music.
  • Peter Roger Davies, Chair of Governors, Kingsdown School, Southend on Sea, Essex and Chair of the Interim Executive Board, Leigh North Street Juniors. For services to education.
  • Robert Rhys Davies. For services to table tennis.
  • Derek Ypres Dawes. For services to the rehabilitation of offenders and the community in Plymouth, Devon.
  • William Thomas Dean, chief executive officer, Tough Mudder. For services to charitable giving through sport.
  • Judith Dorothy Deighton, Foster Carer, Hampshire County Council. For services to children.
  • Richard James Delderfield, Honorary President, Bloodwise. For services to leukaemia and lymphoma research.
  • Jill Belinda Derry (Shedden), Group Human Resources Director, Centrica plc, and Member, Women's Business Council. For services to women and equality.
  • Martin Ronald Devenish, Alumni Support, University Council, University of Birmingham. For services to higher education and voluntary service to educational development overseas.
  • Sister Rose Devlin. For services to improving community relations in schools in Northern Ireland.
  • Parkash Singh Dhami, President, Telford Gurdwara. For services to charity and community cohesion.
  • Helen Kay Dicker, Chair of Governors, Tarleton Academy and lately Chair of Governors, Tarleton Community Primary, Lancashire. For services to education.
  • Anne Dickins (Usher). For services to canoeing.
  • Dr Peter Dickson, Principal in General Practice and Senior Policy Adviser, National Clinical Assessment Service. For services to primary care and the national clinical assessment service.
  • Betty Dixon, Chair of Governors, Jacksdale Primary School and Selston High School, Nottinghamshire. For services to education.
  • Patricia Alison Dodd, chief methodology officer, UK Statistics Authority. For services to statistics and research.
  • Simon Thomas Alexander Dougan DL , Chef and managing director, The Yellow Door Ltd. For services to hospitality and catering in Northern Ireland.
  • Owain Doull. For services to cycling.
  • Gwendoline Anne (Wendy) Duchesne, Grade 7, Capabilities and Resources, Home Office. For services to developing child-friendly immigration systems.
  • Samuel Frank Hartley Duerden, Deputy Director, International Rescue Committee. For services in Response to Humanitarian Crises.
  • Professor James Duffy. For services to entrepreneurship in Scotland.
  • Adam Duggleby. For services to cycling.
  • Richard George Dunning, Owner, Lochnagar Crater. For services to WW1 remembrance.
  • Sheena Russell Dunsmore, general manager, Kidney Kids Scotland. For services to children with renal and urology illnesses.
  • Scott David Durant. For services to rowing.
  • Jacqueline Dyer, Vice-Chair, NHS Mental Health Taskforce. For services to mental health.
  • Le-Roy Augustas Edwards. For services to education, training and employment in Nottingham.
  • Shaun Nicholas Edwards, Cutter Commander, Maritime Command, Border Force. For services to law enforcement and humanitarian services in the mediterranean.
  • Yvonne Edwards, lately Governor, Northampton School for Boys. For services to education.
  • Rhona Louise Elliot, Founder, MS Borders Racing Club. For services to horseracing and charitable services to people with multiple sclerosis in the Scottish borders.
  • Edward George Elliott. For voluntary service to the Royal Ulster Constabulary George Cross Foundation and Association and the community in Northern Ireland.
  • Glyn Ellis, Ambassador and Fundraiser, RNLI. For services to maritime safety and the community in the Isle of Wight.
  • Sian Louise Massey-Ellis, Football Referee. For services to football.
  • Sylvia Marian Evason, Joint Founder, Jennyruth Workshop, Ripon, Yorkshire. For services to people with learning difficulties in Yorkshire.
  • Lora Marie Fachie. For services to cycling.
  • Robert Fahey, lately Real Tennis World Champion. For services to sport.
  • Patricia Fellows, School Meal Adviser. For services to education.
  • Anthony Fenwick, co-Chair, School's Out UK. For services to equality in the education sector.
  • Arjuna Gihan Fernando, Investor and Entrepreneur. For services to the digital economy.
  • Donna Joanne Finch, Community Development & Safeguarding Manager, Essex County Fire and Rescue Service. For services to children, young people and vulnerable adults in the community.
  • Evelyn Theresa Findlater, chief executive officer, Founder and Project Manager, Good Food Matters. For services to young people.
  • Lee Firman. For services to maritime safety through the RNLI.
  • Bethany Charlotte Firth. For services to swimming.
  • Hannah Fletcher, Grade 7, Press Office, Home Office. For services to government communications.
  • James Fletcher. For services to the community in Rotherham, South Yorkshire.
  • Fabulous Flournoy. For services to British basketball and the community in the north east.
  • Jennifer Ann Foote, company secretary and General Counsel, The Manchester College (UK LTE Group) and Chair, National Clerks Network. For services to further education.
  • Anthony David Arnold William Forbes, Chairman, Royal Choral Society. For services to music.
  • Wing Commander David Forbes, Regional chairman, North Region, Air Training Corps. For voluntary service to young people and ex-Service charities.
  • Dr Paul Ford, Pre-Games Manager, British Olympic Association. For services to sport.
  • Deborah Forster, Co-chief executive officer, Apps for Good. For services to digital technology and tech development.
  • John Kay Fowlie DL For voluntary service in Banffshire.
  • James Fox. For services to rowing.
  • Stephen Dale Frampton, Principal, Portsmouth Sixth Form College. For services to education.
  • Dorothy Francis, chief executive officer, Co-operative and Social Enterprise Development Agency. For services to enterprise and the community of Leicester and Leicestershire.
  • Fiona Macdonald, Lady Fraser DL , Chair, The Ninewells Cancer Campaign. For services to charity.
  • Karen Fraser, director, Advertising Association. For services to diversity and equality in the advertising industry.
  • Muriel Morris Freestone. For services to the scout association and the community in Fleetwood, Lancashire.
  • Alesha De-Freitas, Head, Digital Single Market, Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy. For services to the digital single market and voluntary service to education.
  • Joanna Frith. For services to archery.
  • Tracey Kim Gafoor. For public service and for voluntary service to the Stephen Lawrence Charitable Trust.
  • Sarah Irene Garrett, Founder, Square Peg Media. For services to diversity and inclusion.
  • Elizabeth Anne Gaunt, Executive Officer, DWP Operations, Department for Work and Pensions. For services to unemployed armed forces leavers and charity in Derbyshire.
  • Jacqueline Gent, Headteacher, Bishop Barrington School. For services to education and the community in County Durham.
  • Professor Andrew John Timothy George, Chair, Hammersmith Hospital Research Ethics Committee. For services to research participants and the ethical governance of clinical research.
  • Sharan Ghuman, Higher Officer, Outbound Detection Heathrow, Border Force. For services to the safeguarding of vulnerable people.
  • Megan Giglia. For services to cycling.
  • John James Gillan, Grade 6, Border Force, Home Office. For services to border security.
  • George Marr Flemington Gillon, Member, Court of Common Council. For services to the city of London corporation and the Scottish community in London.
  • Beverley Glean, Founder and Artistic Director, IRIE Dance Theatre. For services to the promotion of African and Caribbean dance.
  • Charles Richard Godwin. For services to charity through the Charles Godwin Charitable Trust.
  • Sunita Golvala. For services to South Asian dance in the UK.
  • Louise Goodall, Deputy Head of Fundraising, Conservative Campaign Headquarters. For political service.
  • Dr Victoria Ann Goodwin, Senior Research Fellow, University of Exeter. For services to physiotherapy.
  • Matthew Anthony William Gotrel. For services to rowing.
  • Patricia Ann Gould, Chair, High View School, Plymouth. For services to education.
  • Michael Grant. For services to conservation and the community in Billington, Bedfordshire.
  • Steven Errol Grant, Assistant Director HR, Manchester University. For services to unemployed people in Greater Manchester.
  • Susan Jane Green. For services to young people, education and the community in London.
  • John William Greenslade. For services to agricultural education and conservation in the west country.
  • Vivienne Mary Latimer Grey, Volunteer Crew Member, Little and Broad Haven Lifeboat Station. For services to the RNLI and maritime safety.
  • Rachel Isabel Griffiths, Mental Capacity Act Lead, Care Quality Commission. For services to vulnerable people.
  • Howard Anthony Guard. For services to charity and the community in Hertfordshire.
  • Sophie Megan Hahn. For services to athletics.
  • Dr Martin John Haigh. For services to the community and to charity in West Yorkshire.
  • Gordon Warwick Haines JP , Member, Court of Aldermen, City of London Corporation. For voluntary and charitable services to the community and Environmental Conservation in London.
  • Claire Corrine Hall. For services to cycling.
  • Major Kenneth Stuart Whitfield Hames. For services to homeless and disabled people and ex-service personnel.
  • Wanda Annette Rowan-Hamilton. For services to older people in Killyleagh and Shrigley, County Down.
  • Robert Victor Harrild, Special Sergeant, Metropolitan Police Service. For services to policing.
  • The Reverend Dr Harriet Anne Harris, Chaplain, University of Edinburgh. For services to multi-faith education and community cohesion.
  • Stephen Hart, Grade 7, Ministry of Defence. For services to defence.
  • Sidney Hawkins, Engineering Support and Health and Safety Manager, Air Accidents Investigation Branch. For services to aviation safety.
  • Professor Kamila Hawthorne, Clinical Professor of Medical Education, and Associate Dean for Medicine, University of Surrey. For services to general practice.
  • Liam Heath. For services to canoeing.
  • Pauline Mary Hedges. For services to young people, charity and the community in West Byfleet, Surrey.
  • Dr David Michael Hegarty, Chair, Dudley Clinical Commissioning Group and Chair, West Midlands Clinical Senate. For services to primary care.
  • Simon Helanor, Grade 7, Ministry of Defence. For services to defence.
  • Jeanette Mary Jane Hollywood Henderson, lately Senior Charge Nurse, Forensic Rehab, Elgin Ward, Ailsa Hospital, NHS Ayrshire and Arran. For services to healthcare.
  • Dr Robert Welby Henry. For services to medicine and the sport of horse racing in Northern Ireland.
  • Major James Newton Hereford DL . For services to the rifles regiment and to the community in Herefordshire.
  • Georgina Hermitage. For services to athletics.
  • Michael John Evans Herring, Volunteer, Metropolitan Police and Metropolitan Special Constabulary. For services to policing.
  • Dr Stephen Francis Hetherington. For services to the arts, particularly music and theatres.
  • Bronwen Hewitt. For services to the Dame Hannah Rogers Trust.
  • Dr Anthony Hill, lately Director of Public Health, Lincolnshire County Council and NHS Lincolnshire. For services to public health.
  • Phelan Hill. For services to rowing.
  • Sherann Lloyd Hillman, Project Lead, Seashell Trust and co-Chair, National Network of Parent Carer Forums. For services to children with special educational needs and disabilities.
  • Peter Girvan Hilton JP . For services to education and the community in Manchester.
  • Madeleine Clare Hinch. For services to hockey.
  • Mark Ernest Hix, Restaurateur. For services to hospitality.
  • Isabella Bell Hogg, Chair, Strabane and District Women Together. For voluntary services to the community in Strabane.
  • Michael Holden, Chairman, Trip-ability, Belfast. For services to people with disabilities.
  • Elaine Holness, Kinship Carer and Organiser, Lambeth and Southwark Kinship Care Support Group and director, Karibu Education Centre. For services to children and families.
  • Sharon Marie Holness. For voluntary services through the National Police Memorial Day.
  • Kathleen Hood, lately Head, Widening Participation, University of Edinburgh. For services to widening participation in higher education.
  • Edmund Van Hoof, Head Coach and Men's Technical Director, British Gymnastics. For services to gymnastics.
  • Martyn Vaughan Hooper. For voluntary services to people with pernicious anaemia.
  • Kerry Clancy-Horner, Area Manager, Children's Services, The Children's Society. For services to children and young people.
  • Kenneth Hoskisson, Chair, The Walton Centre NHS Foundation Trust. For services to the NHS and voluntary service to end of life patients.
  • Rodney Philip Huggins. For services to the community in Reading, Berkshire.
  • Trefor Lloyd Hughes. For services to football in Wales, particularly Anglesey.
  • Paul Raymond Hutchins. For services to tennis.
  • Robin Gaston James Iffla. For services to equality and community cohesion in Scotland.
  • Anne-Marie Osawemwenze Ore-Ofe Imafidon, Co-Founder and chief executive officer, Stemettes. For services to young women and stem sectors.
  • Oliver James. For services to rowing.
  • Professor Wen Guo Jiang, Professor of Medicine, Cardiff China Medical Research Collaborative, Cardiff University. For services to international cancer research.
  • Uzma Johal, Festival Director, Frequency Festival and Co-founder and director, Threshold Studios. For services to the digital economy in the east Midlands.
  • Sylvie Suzanne Johnston, Chief Executive, Stonepillow. For services to the community in Chichester and Arun, west Sussex.
  • Anne Judith Jolly, Founder and Manager, Sudden Adult Death Trust UK. For services to raising awareness of sudden arrhythmic death syndrome.
  • Dennis Jones. For services to citizens' advice bureau and the community in Bridgend.
  • Huw Lloyd Jones. For services to the central beacons mountain rescue team.
  • Kevin Jones. For voluntary service in North West England.
  • Martin Peter Jones, Coxswain, RNLI Rhyl Lifeboat Station. For services to maritime safety.
  • Michael James Bernard Jones. For services to swimming.
  • Nicholas Keith Arthur Jones, Founder and Chief Executive, Soho House and Co. For services to the hospitality industry.
  • Terry Jones, Founder, i-D fashion magazine. For services to fashion and popular culture.
  • Hilary Gail, Lady Jopling. For charitable services to Children through Hope and Homes for Children.
  • Susan Mary Jotcham. For services to heritage and the charity sector.
  • Sarbjit Kaur, Detective Sergeant, Merseyside Police. For services to policing.
  • Professor Elizabeth Jane Kay, Associate Dean for Equality and Inclusion and Foundation Dean, Peninsula Dental School. For services to dental education.
  • Thomas John Kelly. For services to charity fundraising.
  • Jo Ann Leah Boylan-Kemp, Principal Lecturer, Nottingham Trent University. For services to higher education.
  • Andrew Mark Kerr. For services to the arts and conservation in Edinburgh.
  • Mordechai Kessler, Chairman and chief executive officer, 2M Group. For services to industry and exporting in the north west of England.
  • Catherine Caskie Khan, Scottish Wheelchair Dance Association. For services to people with disabilities.
  • Javid Khan. For services to the prevention of forced marriage and honour based violence.
  • Sandra Lynn Kibel (Landau). For services to au pair cultural exchange programmes.
  • Sara Regina Kibel, Governor, Westminster Adult Education Service. For services to adult education.
  • Lauren Frances Kilbey, Senior Executive Officer, DWP Operations, Department for Work and Pensions. For services to disadvantaged and vulnerable people in Essex.
  • Louise Kilby, Chair, Geeza Break. For voluntary services in Glasgow.
  • Dr Colin King. For services to football and BAME inclusion in sport.
  • Susan Ann Kitchener. For voluntary service.
  • Ian Andrew Knight, Investigation Officer, H.M. Revenue and Customs. For services to taxation and multi-agency working.
  • Emma Isobel Glynis Kortright, Volunteer and lately Chair of Governors, St. Andrew's and St. Mark's Junior School, Surrey. For services to education and to the community in Surbiton.
  • Matthew Langridge. For services to rowing.
  • Philip Neil Large, Chair, Liverpool Heart and Chest Hospital NHS Foundation Trust. For services to healthcare.
  • Samantha Laskey (Price), Head of Strategy, Performance and Planning, National Counter Terrorism Policing Headquarters. For services to policing.
  • Jack David Laugher. For services to diving.
  • Albert Maurice Leathem. For services to the Royal British Legion.
  • Dr Howard James Leicester. For services to improving patient services in the NHS.
  • Patricia Levitt. For services to the community in Barnsley, South Yorkshire.
  • Andrew Lewis. For services to triathlon.
  • Lily Lewis, Programme Manager, H.M. Revenue and Customs. For services to digital transformation and customer service.
  • Katherine Liddell, Team Organiser, Maintenance Delivery Unit, Network Rail. For services to transport in the east of England.
  • Joshua Littlejohn, Co-founder, Social Bite. For services to social enterprise and entrepreneurship in Scotland.
  • Dr Helen Jayne Livingstone, Specialist Palliative Care Consultant, Airedale NHS Foundation Trust. For services to end of life healthcare.
  • William David Lyndon Lloyd, President, Age Concern. For services to the elderly.
  • Kenneth Robert Logan, Grade 7, Health and Safety Executive for Northern Ireland. For services to health and safety and the community in Northern Ireland.
  • Claire Lomas. For charitable and voluntary services to Spinal Injury Research.
  • Constantine Michael Louloudis. For services to rowing.
  • Julie Love, Chair, Death Abroad You're Not Alone. For services to the families of people who have died abroad.
  • Elvira Jean Lowe. For voluntary service to people with cancer.
  • Nicholas Lowles, Founder, Hope not Hate. For services to community cohesion and combating extremism.
  • Raymond William Lumley, Special Chief Inspector, Norfolk Constabulary. For services to policing.
  • Christopher John Maccormac. For services to education and business in South Yorkshire.
  • Roger Mackintosh, Senior Executive Officer, Traffic and Engineering, Department for Transport. For services to transport.
  • Dr Hannah Macleod. For services to hockey.
  • Janet Enid Maines. For services to the community in Farnham, Surrey.
  • Barrington Patrick Marshall. For services to music promotion.
  • Christopher Denys Matthews. For voluntary service to the community particularly young people in Tyneside.
  • Margaret Ellen Matthews, lately managing director, Dow Corning. For services to manufacturing in Wales.
  • Ian Thomas Mattioli, Chief Executive, Mattioli Woods. For services to business and the community in Leicestershire.
  • Allen Matty, managing director, West Midlands Chambers of Commerce LLP. For services to international trade.
  • Margaret Ruth Mayne, Chair, Board of Governors, Banbridge High School. For services to education.
  • Michael Patrick McAlister, Deputy Director and Head of Curriculum and Business Development, South West College. For services to further education in Northern Ireland.
  • Kathleen May McBride. For services to sport and the community in Coleraine, County Londonderry.
  • Shona McCallin. For services to hockey.
  • William John McCann, managing director, Willowbrook Foods Limited. For services to the food industry and the community in Northern Ireland.
  • Elma Leiper McCausland. For services to Scottish country dancing.
  • William Graham McCrory, Detective Superintendent, Police Service of Northern Ireland. For services to policing and the community.
  • Neil McDonald, lately Executive Officer, Human Resources, Home Office. For services to LGBT staff.
  • Brian Leslie McDowell, Officer, Prime Minister's Office. For services to No. 10 Downing Street.
  • Douglas Webster McGowan, Honorary Branch President, The Paddle Steamer Preservation Society. For services to the preservation of the PS Waverley and charity.
  • Ronald Philip McIvor, Chairman, Farmhouse Biscuits. For services to the food industry and the economic regeneration of East Lancashire.
  • Christopher James Mears. For services to diving.
  • Philippa Margaret Hoyer Millar, Founder, Footsteps Centre. For services to disabled children through provision of intensive physiotherapy facilities in Oxfordshire.
  • Hannah Mills. For services to sailing.
  • Max Bertram Mills, School Volunteer, St. John Fisher Catholic High School, Harrogate. For services to education.
  • Stephanie Millward. For services to swimming.
  • Joan Kirsteen Mitcalfe. For voluntary service in Moray.
  • Nicola Lucienne Molnar, lately chairman, Conservative Women's Organisation. For political service.
  • Aaron Moores. For services to swimming.
  • Alun Emrys Morgan, Assistant Director of Therapies and Health Sciences, Cardiff and Vale University Health Board. For services to physiotherapy.
  • Councillor Anne Yvette Morgan JP DL . For services to the community in South Wales.
  • Brenda Morgan, Partnership Manager, British Airways. For services to economic development in Northern Ireland.
  • Glyn Ian Morgan. For services to Hereford Cathedral and the community in Herefordshire.
  • Rachel Morris. For services to rowing.
  • Sylvia Ingrid Morris, Founder and Chair, Karen Morris Memorial Trust, Cambridgeshire. For services to leukaemia patients and their families.
  • Tessa Mary Morrish, Chair, Gene Therapy for Cystic Fibrosis Appeal, North Hampshire and Cystic Fibrosis Care, Frimley Park Hospital. For services to people with cystic fibrosis.
  • Samuel Rodd Morshead, lately general manager, Perth Racecourse. For services to UK horseracing and to charity.
  • Alan Robert Motion, Chair, Institute of Chartered Foresters Examination Board. For services to sustainable forestry and arboriculture.
  • James Carle Buchan Muirhead, Vice-President, Buchan Battalion. For services to the boys' brigade.
  • Marion Murdoch. For services to sport, particularly curling.
  • Helen Murray. For services to swimming in Scotland.
  • Sarah Marianne Murray, Senior Lecturer, Head of Centre and Programme Lead, Institute of Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London. For services to oral health.
  • Dr Cheryl Dawn Mvula. For services to responsible tourism, community development and conservation in Africa.
  • Massa Singh Nandra. For services to charity and the community in South London.
  • George Christopher Nash. For services to rowing.
  • Shezad Arif Nawab, Co-founder and chief operating officer, Sfhere. For services to business and diversity.
  • Patricia May Neil, Inspector, Employment Agency Standards Inspectorate. For services to employment rights.
  • David Hugh Neill, Emergency Co-ordination Officer, Belfast City Council. For services to local government and the community in Belfast.
  • The Reverend Robert Towers Nelson. For services to homeless people and the community in Wirral.
  • Paul Jonathan Newbegin, Grade 7, Ministry of Defence. For services to the Sovereign Base Area Cyprus.
  • Deirdre Morag Newham JP DL . For services to the community in Northampton, Northamptonshire.
  • Freda Mae Newton. For services to economic and community development in the highlands and islands of Scotland.
  • Catherine Fiona Jane Newton, Humanitarian Adviser, Department for International Development. For services to emergency and humanitarian relief.
  • Avril Esmond Sandra Nicholl. For services to disabled people through the Riding for the Disabled Association, Ballyclare.
  • Edmund Francis Paul Nickless, lately Executive Secretary, Geological Society of London. For service to Geology.
  • Jonathan Phillip Norfolk, Head Coach, Para-Cycling. For services to cycling.
  • Robert Hamilton Northridge. For services to rowing and community relations in Northern Ireland.
  • Inayat Omarji. For services to built heritage and the community in Bolton.
  • Michael Andrew Martin O'Neill, Manager, Northern Ireland Football Team. For services to football and the community in Northern Ireland.
  • Thomas Neville Orr DL , Governor, Strabane Academy. For services to education in Northern Ireland.
  • Richard Craig Owen, Prison Officer, H.M. Prison Swansea. For services to prisoners and voluntary service to ex-service personnel.
  • William John Owen. For services to cycling particularly in Wales.
  • Lily Isabelle Owsley. For services to hockey.
  • Leslie Stephen Palmer, Founder, The Modern Notting Hill Carnival. For services to performance and the community in London.
  • Gillian Joan Adele Palmer, Founder, Marie Collins Foundation. For services to abused children.
  • Alison Jane Swan Parente, Founder, The School of Artisan Food. For services to charity and education sectors.
  • Anthony John Parfitt, Volunteer Coastguard Officer, H.M. Coastguard, Mumbles, Swansea. For services to maritime safety.
  • Bruce Rodney Wingate Parker. For services to charity and to the community in Hampshire.
  • Catherine Monica Parlett, Chair, Lighthouse Trust, Leeds. For services to children with special educational needs and disabilities.
  • Dr John Parry. For services to the Linklater Pavilion and the community in Lewes, East Sussex.
  • Geoffrey William Parsons. For services to the Wingate special children's trust and the community in Nantwich, Cheshire.
  • Kathryn Parsons, co-founder and co-chief executive officer, Decoded. For services to digital education.
  • Priyesh Patel, managing director, Cofresh Snack Foods. For services to the economy in Leicestershire and to exports.
  • Vanita Patel, Anti-Slavery Ambassador, Worldwide Eradication of Slavery. For charitable services to Human Rights.
  • Walter Ivor Pattison. For services to disabled people in North East England.
  • Marilyn Payne, Volunteer, Save the Children. For charitable services.
  • Sarah Jayne Pearson, Head of Customer Services, Personal Tax Operations, H.M. Revenue and Customs. For services to taxpayers.
  • Adam Peaty. For services to swimming.
  • Dr Terence Dale Pennington, Honorary Research Fellow, Kew. For voluntary service to plant sciences and conservation particularly in Latin America.
  • Edward John Perry, Social Secretary, The Guinea Pig Club. For voluntary service to veterans.
  • Dr Janice Wendy Peters, Founder and director, Katalytik Ltd. For services to women in engineering and science.
  • Hilary Fredricke Cawthorne Philbin, President, British Fencing. For services to fencing and sports administration.
  • Camilla Phillips. For services to the community through the hope centre in Halesowen, West Midlands.
  • Gordon Errol Phillips, lately Principal, The Meadows Sports College, Oldbury, West Midlands. For services to young people with special educational needs and disabilities.
  • Paula Ann Philpott, Head of Learning Academy, South Eastern Regional College. For services to further education in Northern Ireland.
  • John Stephen Pollard, Higher Executive Officer, Ministry of Defence. For services to service personnel and families.
  • Susan Ann Polydorou. For services to the community in Bromley and Bexley, Kent.
  • Lynne Davina Potts, Assistant Chief Officer, Greater Manchester Police. For services to policing.
  • George Powell, Captain, 1st Troon Boys' Brigade. For services to the boys' brigade and the community in Ayrshire.
  • Dr Jennifer Anne Preston, Consultant Occupational Therapist, NHS Ayrshire and Arran. For services to the occupational therapy profession and neurological rehabilitation.
  • Eric Thomas Protheroe. For services to science education and to the community in Nantwich, Cheshire.
  • Samantha Ann Quek. For services to hockey.
  • Mervyn Quigg. For services to the Boys' Brigade.
  • Mary Elizabeth Quinn, Education Consultant and lately Executive Principal, Stourport High School and Sixth Form College, Stourport-on-Severn. For services to education.
  • Thomas Matthew Ransley. For services to rowing.
  • Leslie Ratcliffe TD , Head of Community Relations, Jaguar Land Rover. For services to business, education and the community.
  • Peter David Reeve, Councillor, Huntingdonshire District Council. For services to local government and the community in Ramsey, Cambridgeshire.
  • Gordon Reid. For services to wheelchair tennis.
  • Mark Riddell, Social Worker, Care Leaving Services, Trafford Local Authority. For services to children.
  • David Rigal. For services to diversity in the civil service and services to the Jewish community in London.
  • Neil David St. John Roberts, Grade 7, Home Office. For services to truth and justice through the Hillsborough Independent Panel.
  • Eleanor Robinson. For services to swimming.
  • Rita Christine Roblin, Foster Carer, Bristol and Chair, North Somerset Foster Panel. For services to children.
  • The Honourable Helen Alexandra Briscoe, Lady Roche. For voluntary services
  • Susannah Elizabeth Joy Rodgers. For services to swimming.
  • Louis Rolfe. For services to cycling.
  • Justin Peter Rose. For services to golf.
  • David James Ross. For services to renaissance and baroque Scottish music in the north of Scotland.
  • Karen Valerie Ross. For services to charity and the reduction of knife crime among young people in Walsall, West Midlands.
  • Jean Rough, lately Panel Member, Glasgow Children's Panel. For services to the children's hearings system in Scotland.
  • Michael Gerrard Roughan, Chairman, Shropshire, Telford and Wrekin and Leicestershire and Rutland Adoption Panels. For services to children and to the community.
  • Clive Mark Rowe, Actor. For services to drama.
  • Lauren Rachel Catherine Rowles. For services to rowing.
  • Indhu Rubasingham, Artistic Director, Tricycle Theatre. For services to theatre.
  • Cynthia Miriam Rumboll, lately chairman, Jersey Commandery, St. John Ambulance. For voluntary service to first aid.
  • Hannah Russell. For services to swimming.
  • Mohammed Abid Saleh, Detective Constable, CSE Team, Lancashire Constabulary. For services to policing and the community in East Lancashire.
  • Professor Fiona Ruth Sampson. For services to literature and the literary community.
  • Kenrick Sandy, Dancer, Choreographer and Teacher. For services to dance and the community.
  • William Spencer Satch. For services to rowing.
  • Mohamed Karim Sbihi. For services to rowing.
  • Mary Elizabeth Scales, Higher Executive Officer, DWP Operations, Department for Work and Pensions. For services to social justice.
  • John Antony Schoner JP For services to the community in Hythe, Kent.
  • Alex Virina Scott, Defender, England Women and Arsenal Ladies. For services to football.
  • Giles Lyndon Scott. For services to sailing.
  • Helen Sarah Scott. For services to cycling.
  • Mukesh Shah. For charitable and community service in the UK and abroad.
  • Marcia Shakespeare, Public Volunteer on Gang, Gun and Knife Projects, Birmingham Area, West Midlands Police. For services to law and order.
  • Iris Sharman. For services to young people and the community in Burton Latimer, Northamptonshire.
  • John Sharpe, National Chair, Royal Observer Corps Association. For voluntary service to the Children's Hearings System in Scotland and the Royal Observer Corps.
  • Susan Mary Sharratt, lately Head of Speech and Language Unit and Special Educational Needs Co-ordinator, Bexton School, Knutsford. For services to children with special educational needs.
  • Kevin Gordon Shaw, Senior Executive Officer, Ministry of Defence. For services to the Royal Navy.
  • Jill Bernadette Marie Sheldrake, Service Director, Together Trust, Cheadle, Cheshire. For services to children.
  • Sangeeta Rajesh Shingadia, Field Force Officer, H.M. Revenue and Customs. For services to debt collection and charitable service in the UK and India.
  • Robert Spencer Simpson, Founder, Electrosonic. For services to the UK's audio-visual industry.
  • Tony Singh, Chef Director. For services to the food and drink industry and charity.
  • Professor Sital Singh Sitara. For services to Sikh heritage and culture.
  • Stephanie Elizabeth Slater. For services to swimming.
  • David Smith. For services to boccia.
  • Gillian Maureen Smith. For services to guiding and the community in Great Glemham, Suffolk.
  • Joanna May Smith, Deputy Director for Prisons, North East England, Samaritans. For services to offender support.
  • Reginald Leonard Smith (Marty Wilde). For services to popular music.
  • Robert Smith, Harbour Master, Port of Wells. For services to the community in Wells-Next-the-Sea.
  • Susan Mary Farrington Smith, Chief Executive, Brain Tumour Research. For services to brain tumour research and awareness raising.
  • Anne Smol, Founder and Chief Executive, Face Front Inclusive Theatre. For services to theatre and inclusion in drama.
  • Katherine Elizabeth Smyth, Policy Director, Community Energy England. For services to the community energy sector.
  • Elaine Spalding, Higher Executive Officer, Ministry of Defence. For services to defence.
  • Frederick Nigel Sparrow. For services to the community in Clapham, Bedfordshire.
  • Michael Spence, Teaching Assistant and lately Governor, Manorbrook Primary School, Gloucestershire and Trustee, Great Britain Wheelchair Rugby. For services to education and disability sport.
  • Edwin Charles Stanbridge, Assistant Officer, H.M. Revenue and Customs. For services to customer service and the community in County Durham.
  • Frank Stansil, Fundraiser, King's College Hospital Charity. For services to health charities.
  • Professor Jonathan Paul Stephens, lately Director of Music and Music Education, University of Aberdeen. For services to music education.
  • Jean Stephenson, Adviser, Citizens' Advice Bureau, North East Lincolnshire. For services to charity and the community in North East Lincolnshire.
  • Michael Stephenson. For services to rugby league and sports broadcasting.
  • Geoffrey Edward Gordon Stock. For services to young people and the community in Horfield, Bristol.
  • Danny Stone, Secretary, All-Party Parliamentary Group against Anti-Semitism. For services to combating hate crime.
  • Alistair Duffus Strachan. For services to farming and the community in Cuminestown, Aberdeenshire.
  • Jessica Stretton. For services to archery.
  • Alice Tai. For services to swimming.
  • Manisha Tailor. For services to football and diversity in sport.
  • Charles Ellis Talbot. For services to the community in Kidderminster, Worcestershire.
  • Lianne Estrelle Tapson, Chair, Grantham Tennis Club. For services to sport and the community in Lincolnshire particularly Grantham.
  • Susan Thain, Senior Executive Officer, Ministry of Defence. For services to army education.
  • Sophie Thornhill. For services to cycling.
  • Olwen Patricia Tomlinson, Senior Executive Officer, Immigration National Security and Counter Terrorism Team, Home Office. For services to immigration operations and border security.
  • Deborah Jane Toon, Regional chairman, Yorkshire and the Humber Conservatives. For political service.
  • Susannah Townsend. For services to hockey.
  • Dr Antony David Trapp DL . For services to the engineering and energy industries.
  • Richard Hamlyn Tucker, Founder and director, AAA Property Services. For services to business, skills and the community in North East England.
  • Denise Michelle Tully, Bequeathal Officer, University of Liverpool. For services to medical education and research.
  • Georgina Sophie Twigg. For services to hockey.
  • Melanie Dawn Ulyatt (Coley), managing director, One to One Support Services and Chair, Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Federation of Small Businesses. For services to entrepreneurship and business.
  • Laura Unsworth. For services to hockey.
  • Rita Yvonne Roberts Upchurch. For services to the development of cosmetic camouflage.
  • Louise Irene Upton, lately Foster Carer, Kent County Council. For services to children.
  • Ronald Upton, lately Foster Carer, Kent County Council. For services to children.
  • Barnaby Hubert David Usborne. For services to the Chiltern Society and the community in the Lee, Buckinghamshire.
  • Jatinder Verma, co-founder, Tara Arts. For services to diversity in the arts, particularly drama.
  • Patricia Clare Vernon, Head of Healthcare Quality Legislation and Delivery, Welsh Government. For services to organ donation and transplantation in Wales.
  • Mira Vyas, Senior Executive Officer, Universal Credit Programme, Department for Work and Pensions. For services to welfare and the community in London.
  • Austin William Sidney Walker, County Vice-President, Kent, Royal British Legion. For voluntary service to veterans and their families.
  • Ian Walker. For services to Olympic and international competitive sailing.
  • John Stewart Walker. For services to archery.
  • Wilma Walker, Headteacher, Kintore Primary School. For services to education in Aberdeenshire.
  • Barbara Anne Walsh, lately Case Officer, Honours and Appointments Secretariat, Cabinet Office. For services to public administration and to the community in Kent.
  • Helen Richardson-Walsh. For services to hockey.
  • Angela Walters, Programme Director for Fashion, Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts London. For services to higher education, fashion and the creative industries.
  • Gillian Walton, lately Deputy Headteacher, St. Martin's Catholic Primary School, Cheshire. For services to education.
  • Parthenope Lucy Ward, Senior Assistant Librarian, House of Lords. For parliamentary service.
  • Simon Ward, lately chief operating officer, British Fashion Council. For services to fashion.
  • William John Warnock. For services to higher education sport.
  • Wendy Warren, Head of Emergency Planning, Aneurin Bevan University Health Board. For services to emergency planning and health protection.
  • Hollie Webb. For services to hockey.
  • Dr Premila Nalini Webster, Director of Public Health Education and Training, Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford. For services to public health.
  • George Vernon Wells, Chair, Selby College Corporation. For services to further education.
  • Nicola Marie Wetherall. For services to holocaust education, genocide prevention and human rights education.
  • Joanne Elizabeth Wheeler (Monk), Founder and co-Chair, Satellite Finance Network and Communications Partner, Bird & Bird. For services to the space sector.
  • Joseph Lawrence White, Entrepreneur and Angel Investor. For services to technology businesses.
  • Nicola White. For services to hockey.
  • Laurence Whiteley. For services to rowing.
  • Max Antony Whitlock. For services to gymnastics.
  • Agnes Provan Miller Whyte, Chair, Breathe Easy, Kirkcaldy. For services to people with lung conditions.
  • Christine Ann Wicks. For services to Girlguiding in Worcester Park and Greater London West.
  • Emma Clare Wiggs. For services to canoeing.
  • David Wilkinson, Consultant Vascular Surgeon, Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and Postgraduate Dean, Health Education England, Yorkshire. For services to the NHS.
  • Eileona Mary Wilkinson, Independent Monitoring board member, H.M. Prison Lancaster Farms. For services to prisons and H.M. Prison Service.
  • Sue Ann Wilkinson, chief executive officer, Association for Physical Education. For services to education.
  • Caroline Elizabeth Williams, Chief Executive, Norfolk Chamber of Commerce. For services to the Norfolk business community.
  • Sonia Bassey-Williams, Integrated Early Support Senior Manager, Cheshire West and Chester Council. For services to the community in Liverpool.
  • Anthony Peter Wilson, director, AECOM. For services to building and engineering.
  • Juanita Anne Francis Wilson, Founder, Mossburn Community Farm, Lockerbie. For services to vulnerable children, adults and animals in Dumfries and Galloway.
  • Ethne Berenice Woldman, Trustee, The Targu Mures Trust. For services to the Jewish community in Scotland and Romania.
  • Suzanne Wolff. For services to women in sport.
  • Dr Miranda Rachel Wolpert, Founder, Evidence Based Practice Unit, AFNCCF and UCL, and co-Founder, The Child Outcomes Research Consortium. For services to child and adolescent mental healthcare.
  • Dr Stuart Glynn Wood, Head of Music Therapy, Barchester Healthcare. For services to music therapy and care.
  • Alan Woodhouse, Volunteer, Samaritans. For services to vulnerable people in Merseyside.
  • Robert Woods, lately Executive chairman, Mattioli Woods. For services to business and the community in Leicestershire.
  • Ronald Charles Woodward. For services to age UK and the community in Herne Bay, Kent.
  • Matthew James Wylie. For services to swimming.
  • Philip Richard Young, Team Leader, Environment Agency. For services to communities, the environment and flood risk management.
  • Riffat Perveen Young, Head of Corporate Services, Department for International Development Nepal. For services to international emergency response.
  • Thomas Paterson Young, co-founder, Angels' Share Glass. For services to glassblowing.
Diplomatic Service and Overseas List
  • Edward John Bewick Baker, lately Head of Climate Change and Energy, British Consulate General, Shanghai, China. For services to UK/China relations.
  • Oliver Ramsey Ballhatchet, Olympic and Paralympic Attaché, British Consultate General, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. For services to British Olympic and Paralympic sport.
  • Darren Francis Forbes-Batey, lately Deputy Head of Mission, Bamako, Mali. For services to supporting British nationals overseas during crises.
  • Simon Biggin, First Secretary, Foreign and Commonwealth Office. For services to overseas security.
  • Marianne Louise Black, Chair of the Board of Trustees, The British School, Tokyo. For services to British international education.
  • Melanie Jane Blake, Founder Kamili Organisation, Nairobi. For services to mental health in Kenya.
  • Catherine Kay Borien, Trustee and Field Worker, Borien Educational Foundation for Southern Africa. For services to schools in rural areas of the Eastern Cape, South Africa.
  • Stacy Bradford, Third Secretary, Foreign and Commonwealth Office. For services to British interests in Nigerian security sector reform.
  • Raymond Arthur Breden, Former chairman, British Romanian Chamber of Commerce. For services to British industry.
  • Richard Bruce Allen Brown, British Honorary Consul, Sicily. For services to assisting British nationals in Sicily, Italy.
  • Shehzad Charania, lately First Secretary, The Hague, Netherlands. For services to international law and legal diplomacy.
  • Timothy John Colley, lately Deputy Director, Overseas Territories Directorate Foreign and Commonwealth Office. For services to Anguilla.
  • Roger Maxwell Cooke, latterly President, British Chamber of Commerce, Spain. For services to British businesses in Spain and British-Spanish trade and investment.
  • Mary Shaw Coulson, Founder and Executive Director, Restart Africa. For services to improving the welfare, health and education of disadvantaged children in Gilgil, Kenya.
  • Helga Danmayr, British Honorary Pro-Consul, Salzburg. For services to British nationals in Austria.
  • Akuja Mading de Garang, Team Leader for Girls' Education, South Sudan. For services to the promotion of girls' education and social development in South Sudan. [6]
  • Duncan Dyason, Charity Worker, Street Kids Direct, Guatemala City, Guatemala. For services to improving the lives of street children in Guatemala.
  • Penelope Jayne Garnham, Deputy Head, Corporate Services, British Embassy, Kabul, Afghanistan. For services to the welfare of H.M. government staff.
  • Lynda Catherine Gould, co-Founder, Butterfly Children's Hospices, China. For services to the provision of palliative care to babies and infants in China.
  • Patricia Mary Herbert, Vice Chair, Prospect Burma. For services to Anglo-Burmese relations.
  • Thomas Michael Hughes, Founder, Silicon Valley Internship Programme. For services to British graduates in Silicon Valley and San Francisco.
  • Dr John Donough Heber Keatinge, lately Director General, Asian Vegetable Research and Development Centre, World Vegetable Centre. For services to tropical agriculture and reduction of poverty and malnutrition in the developing world.
  • Michael Douglas Keigwin, Uganda Conservation Foundation. For services to African wildlife and conservation.
  • Gareth David Knight, First Secretary, Foreign and Commonwealth Office. For services to British interests in Iraq and Afghanistan.
  • David James Lister, Second Secretary, Foreign and Commonwealth Office. For services to UK national security.
  • Carolyn Olga (Lena) Milosevic, lately Country Director, British Council Mexico. For services to cultural relations in Mexico and the UK-Mexico Dual Year 2015.
  • Brigadier Malcolm Bruce Page, Council Member for Somaliland and Grand President's Appointee, The Royal Commonwealth Ex-Services League. For services to veterans in Somaliland.
  • Guy Richard Perryman, Radio Broadcaster. For services to British music in Japan.
  • Dr John Anthony Poole, Doctor and Surgeon, Guatemala City, Guatemala. For services to medicine in Guatemala.
  • Thomas Mark Pountney, First Secretary, Foreign and Commonwealth Office. For services to national security.
  • Alison Shan Price, Founder and chief executive officer, One World Actors' Centre. For services to the dramatic arts in Kuwait and the Gulf region.
  • Paul Robert Seaby, former Team Leader and Deputy Team Leader, Rapid Deployment Team, Foreign and Commonwealth Office. For services to British nationals overseas affected by major disasters and emergencies.
  • Richard Alec Street, Chairman, Chernobyl Children's Life Line, (Pinxton and East Derbyshire Link). For services to sick children in Belarus.
  • Philip Waterman, Second Secretary, Foreign and Commonwealth Office. For services to enhancing diplomacy and national security.
  • Simon Keith Whittle, First Secretary, Foreign and Commonwealth Office. For services to national security.
  • Paul Andrew Wiggins, Overseas Territories Regional Criminal Intelligence System Network Manager, British Consultate General, Miami, USA. For services to the UK overseas territories.
  • Ivy May Yon. For services to the voluntary sector, tourism sector and teaching profession in St. Helena.

British Empire Medal (BEM)

Civil Division
Diplomatic Service and Overseas List

Royal Red Cross

Associates of the Royal Red Cross (ARRC)

  • Warrant Officer Lee Bond, Princess Mary's Royal Air Force Nursing Service
  • Major Jennifer Anne Ritchie, Queen Alexandra's Royal Army Nursing Corps

Queen's Police Medal (QPM)

Ribbon bar of the Queen's Police Medal for Merit, as awarded for Distinguished Service Queens Police Medal for Merit.png
Ribbon bar of the Queen's Police Medal for Merit, as awarded for Distinguished Service
England and Wales
Scotland
Northern Ireland

Queen's Fire Service Medal (QFSM)

Ribbon bar of the Queen's Fire Service Medal for Merit, as awarded for Distinguished Service Queens Fire Service Medal UK.png
Ribbon bar of the Queen's Fire Service Medal for Merit, as awarded for Distinguished Service
England and Wales
Scotland

Queen's Ambulance Service Medal (QAM)

Ribbon bar of the Queen's Ambulance Service Medal for Merit, as awarded for Distinguished Service Queens Ambulance Service Medal.png
Ribbon bar of the Queen's Ambulance Service Medal for Merit, as awarded for Distinguished Service
England and Wales
Scotland

Queen's Volunteer Reserves Medal (QVRM)

Ribbon bar of the Queen's Volunteer Reserves Medal Queen's Volunteer Reserves Medal Ribbon 100px.png
Ribbon bar of the Queen's Volunteer Reserves Medal

Overseas Territories Police Medal

Ribbon bar of the Overseas Territories Police Medal for Merit, as awarded for Meritorious Service UK Colonial Police Medal for Meritorious Service ribbon bar.PNG
Ribbon bar of the Overseas Territories Police Medal for Merit, as awarded for Meritorious Service

Crown Dependencies

The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire

Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE)

Jersey
  • Jill Meredith Clapham. For Honorary services to the Royal Court and to the community.

Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE)

Isle of Man
  • Olga Kathleen Gray. For services to the Manx community.
  • Philip James Taubman. For services to motorcycling and the Manx community.
Guernsey
  • Robert Anthony Platts. For services to disabled people in Guernsey.
Jersey
  • William Millar. For services to the state of Jersey prison service.

British Empire Medal (BEM)

Isle of Man
Guernsey

Antigua and Barbuda

Below are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Antigua and Barbuda, on advice of her ministers in Antigua and Barbuda. [7]

The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire

Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE)

  • Dwight Cuthbert Revirre Gardiner. For services to the national and international marine community.

Queen's Police Medal (QPM)

Canada

Grenada

Below are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Grenada, on advice of the Grenadian Government. [8]

The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire

Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE)

  • Michael Archibald. For services to banking.

Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE)

  • Lawrence Anthony Duncan. For services to the cruise ship industry.
  • Maudlyn Ferguson. For services to education.

British Empire Medal (BEM)

New Zealand

Saint Christopher and Nevis

Below are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Saint Kitts and Nevis, on advice of the Kittian and Nevisian Government. [9]

The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire

Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE)

  • Dennis Michael Arthur Morton. For services to commerce and industry.

Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE)

  • Claudette Althea Manchester. For services to broadcasting and to the community.

Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE)

Solomon Islands

Below are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of the Solomon Islands, on advice of the Solomon Islands Government. [10]

The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire

Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE)

  • Joyce May Hallu. For services to nursing.
  • Neptune Aleigana Lopu. For services to teaching, the church and to the community.

Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE)

  • Hezel Pitavavini Boseto. For services to the government, the United Church and to the community.
  • Peter Toosi. For services to government, the church and to the community.
  • Morris Waria. For services to the government's marine division, the church and to the community.

Queen's Police Medal (QPM)

Related Research Articles

The Queen's Birthday Honours 2008 were appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms to various orders and honours to recognise and reward good works by citizens of those countries. The Birthday Honours are awarded as part of the Queen's Official Birthday celebrations during the month of June.

The New Year Honours 2010 were announced on 31 December 2009 in the United Kingdom, New Zealand, Cook Islands, Barbados, Grenada, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Saint Lucia, Belize, Antigua and Barbuda, Saint Christopher and Nevis and other Commonwealth realms to celebrate the year passed and mark the beginning of 2010.

The New Year Honours 2012 were announced on 31 December 2011 in the United Kingdom, New Zealand, Antigua and Barbuda, Grenada, Belize, Saint Christopher and Nevis, The Solomon Islands, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and The Cook Islands, to celebrate the year passed and mark the beginning of 2012.

The Birthday Honours List 2012 was released on 16 June 2012 in the United Kingdom, on 11 June 2012 in Australia on 4 June 2012 in New Zealand, on 15 June 2012 in Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Grenada, Belize, Saint Lucia, Solomon Islands, and The Cook Islands. The Birthday Honours List was released during the height of the Diamond jubilee celebrations, and was therefore styled The Birthday and Diamond Jubilee Honours 2012 in New Zealand, while United Kingdom celebrated the jubilee with a separate list later that year.

The New Year Honours 2013 were appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms to various orders and honours to recognise and reward good works by citizens of those countries. The New Year Honours are awarded as part of the New Year celebrations at the start of January.

The 2013 Birthday Honours were appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms of Queen Elizabeth II to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by citizens of those countries. The Birthday Honours are awarded as part of the Queen's Official Birthday celebrations during the month of June. The Queen's Birthday Honours were announced on 15 June 2013 in the United Kingdom, on 10 June 2013 in Australia, on 3 June 2013 in New Zealand, and on 15 June 2013 in Grenada, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, Saint Lucia and Belize.

The New Year Honours 2014 were appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms to various orders and honours to recognise and reward good works by citizens of those countries. The New Year Honours are awarded as part of the New Year celebrations at the start of January.

The New Year Honours 2015 were appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms to various orders and honours to recognise and reward good works by citizens of those countries. The New Year Honours are awarded as part of the New Year celebrations at the start of January.

The 2015 Queen's Birthday Honours were appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms of Queen Elizabeth II to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by citizens of those countries. The Birthday Honours were awarded as part of the Queen's Official Birthday celebrations during the month of June. The Queen's Birthday Honours were announced on 1 June 2015 in New Zealand, on 8 June in Australia, and on 12 June in the United Kingdom, in Grenada, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, Saint Lucia and Belize.

The New Year Honours 2016 were appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms to various orders and honours to recognise and reward good works by citizens of those countries. The New Year Honours are awarded as part of the New Year celebrations at the start of January. The official lists of the 2016 New Year Honours for civilians and military were announced on 31 December.

The 2016 Queen's Birthday Honours are appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms of Queen Elizabeth II to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by citizens of those countries. The Birthday Honours are awarded as part of the Queen's Official Birthday celebrations during the month of June. The Queen's Birthday Honours were announced on 6 June 2016 in New Zealand and 10 June in the United Kingdom.

The 2017 Queen's Birthday Honours were appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms of Queen Elizabeth II to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by citizens of those countries. The Birthday Honours were awarded as part of the Queen's Official Birthday celebrations during the month of June. The Queen's Birthday Honours for the United Kingdom were announced on 16 June; the honours for New Zealand were announced on 5 June and for Australia on 12 June.

The 2018 New Year Honours are appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms to various orders and honours to recognise and reward good works by citizens of those countries. The New Year Honours are awarded as part of the New Year celebrations at the start of January and were officially announced in The London Gazette on 30 December 2017. Australia, an independent Realm, has a separate honours system and its first honours of the year, the 2018 Australia Day Honours, coincide with Australia Day on 26 January. New Zealand, also an independent Realm, has its own system of honours.

The 2018 Queen's Birthday Honours are appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms of Queen Elizabeth II to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by citizens of those countries. The Birthday Honours are awarded as part of the Queen's Official Birthday celebrations during the month of June. The Queen's Birthday Honours for the United Kingdom were announced on 9 June; the honours for New Zealand were announced on 4 June and for Australia on 11 June.

The 2019 New Year Honours are appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms to various orders and honours to recognise and reward good works by citizens of those countries. The New Year Honours are awarded as part of the New Year celebrations at the start of January and were officially announced in The London Gazette at 22:30 on 28 December 2018. Australia, an independent Realm, has a separate honours system and its first honours of the year, the 2019 Australia Day Honours, coincide with Australia Day on 26 January.

The 2019 Queen's Birthday Honours are appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms of Queen Elizabeth II to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by citizens of those countries. The Birthday Honours are awarded as part of the Queen's Official Birthday celebrations during the month of June. The Queen's Birthday Honours for the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth realms were announced on 8 June, except the honours for New Zealand that were announced on 3 June and for Australia on 10 June.

The 2020 New Year Honours are appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms to various orders and honours to recognise and reward good works by citizens of those countries. The New Year Honours are awarded as part of the New Year celebrations at the start of January and were officially announced in The London Gazette on 27 December 2019. Australia, an independent Realm, has a separate honours system and its first honours of the year, the 2020 Australia Day Honours, coincide with Australia Day on 26 January.

The Queen's Birthday Honours for 2020 are appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms of Queen Elizabeth II to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by citizens of those countries. The Birthday Honours are awarded as part of the Queen's Official Birthday celebrations during the month of June. The honours for New Zealand were announced on 1 June, and for Australia on 8 June.

The 2022 Queen's Birthday Honours are appointments by some of the 15 Commonwealth realms of Queen Elizabeth II to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by citizens of those countries. The Birthday Honours are awarded as part of the Queen's Official Birthday celebrations during the month of June. They were announced on 1 June 2022, in anticipation of the Queen's Platinum Jubilee. They were the last honours granted by the Queen before her death on 8 September 2022.

The 2023 New Year Honours are appointments by some of the 15 Commonwealth realms to various orders and honours to recognise and reward good works by citizens of those countries. The New Year Honours are awarded as part of the New Year celebrations at the start of January and those for 2023 were announced on 30 December 2022.

References

  1. "No. 61803". The London Gazette (Supplement). 31 December 2016. pp. N1–N37.
  2. "Farah, Murray and Ennis-Hill recognised as Rio 2016 heroes dominate New Year Honours list". ITV News. 31 December 2016. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  3. Rayner, Gordon (16 August 2016). "Team GB's Olympic champions are on the path for New Year honours". The Daily Telegraph . Retrieved 27 December 2016.
  4. Mudie, Keir (17 December 2016). "Jason Kenny and Laura Trott set for 'something big' in New Year's Honours". The Mirror. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  5. "New Year's Honours 2017". Government of the United Kingdom. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  6. "FCO Press Release highlights the work of Akuja and GESS". Girls’ Education South Sudan. 31 December 2016. Retrieved 21 May 2024.
  7. "No. 61806". The London Gazette (Supplement). 30 December 2016. p. N50.
  8. "No. 61804". The London Gazette (Supplement). 31 December 2016. p. N42.
  9. "No. 61807". The London Gazette (Supplement). 31 December 2016. p. N54.
  10. "No. 61805". The London Gazette (Supplement). 31 December 2016. p. N46.