The Edinburgh Futures Institute (EFI) at the University of Edinburgh is an interdisciplinary unit within the College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences. Opened in 2022, the EFI links arts, humanities, and social sciences with other disciplines in the research and teaching of complex, multi-stakeholder societal challenges and data-driven solutions. The institute offers undergraduate and postgraduate degrees in interdisciplinary subjects such as Data and Artificial Intelligence Ethics; Future Governance; and Planetary Health. The EFI is housed in the Category-A listed former Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh at Lauriston Place, at the southern edge of Edinburgh's Old Town. As of 2024, it is led by Interim Director Kev Dhaliwal, Professor of Molecular Imaging and Healthcare Technology.
Until 2003, the old Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh in Lauriston Place had been a working hospital as part of the National Health Service. In 1998, a joint project between private finance, local authorities, and the university moved the hospital to a modern medical campus in the Little France area. [1] Parts of the vacated Royal Infirmary grounds and the buildings which had housed the medical and gynaecology wards, were sold in 2001, and later developed into the Quartermile residential and commercial site.
The university purchased the remaining Royal Infirmary site, which had housed the surgical wards, in 2016. [2] This had sat empty since 2003, when the surgical services transferred to the new Royal Infirmary in Little France. [3] In 2018, the university signed the £1.3 billion Edinburgh and South East Scotland City Region Deal in partnership with the UK and Scottish governments, six local authorities and all universities and colleges in the region. [4] One of the five 'innovation hubs' the initiative sought to create was a proposed Edinburgh Futures Institute intended to "tackle the world's major problems" and housed in the Royal Infirmary. [3]
In 2017, the university received a £10 million gift from an anonymous donor for the renovation of the Royal Infirmary and creation of the EFI; it was the largest-ever capital donation to the university at the time. [5] The university submitted large-scale renovation and extension plans by architectural firm Bennetts Associates [6] for the site to the City of Edinburgh Council, which were approved in December 2017. [7] Construction firm Balfour Beatty won the £70 million contract for the renovation, while the total cost of the project was believed to be about £120 million. [8] [9] Construction works began in early 2018 with an anticipated opening date of 2021, but the building's listed status and the COVID-19 pandemic delayed the process. [10] [2]
Teaching on the EFI's first postgraduate programs began in September 2022 in other venues around the university's George Square campus. [11] [12] The institute and its newly-restored building were formally opened to the public on 3 June 2024. [2] The EFI admitted its first undergraduate cohort in Interdisciplinary Futures in September 2023. [13]
In August 2024, the Institute hosted the Edinburgh International Book Festival, with EFI now designated as the Festival's new permanent home. [14] [15] [16]
The EFI's mission is research and teaching on complex, multi-stakeholder societal challenges, with an emphasis on data-driven solutions. [17] It aims to produce innovation especially in creative industries, financial services and fintech, public services, and tourism and festivals, all of which are key sectors of the Scottish economy. [18] The EFI's researchers come from a variety of academic disciplines across the arts, humanities, social sciences, informatics, medicine, and natural sciences. Most staff members also teach in other Schools at the university, and the institute considers itself part of the wider university ecosystem in its multidisciplinary approach to research and teaching. [19] [20]
Organizationally, the EFI is an institute under the governance of the university's College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences. It is considered a 'School'—Edinburgh's terminology for a self-administering academic unit representing one or more adjacent disciplines, such as the School of Social and Political Science—despite not being named so. [21] The EFI's first Director was legal scholar Lesley McAra, Professor of Penology. McAra was succeeded in 2022 by Chris Speed, Chair of Design Informatics. [22] [23] Since November 2023, EFI is led by Interim Director Kev Dhaliwal, Professor of Molecular Imaging and Healthcare Technology. [24] The institute has four further Directors of Business Engagement & Partnerships, Education, Innovation, and Research. [25]
The EFI's primary role is in postgraduate teaching. As of 2024, it offers one four-year undergraduate Master of Arts (Scotland) degree, [26] and 13 one-year postgraduate Master of Science degrees available for full-time or part-time study. [27]
The history of science and technology (HST) is a field of history that examines the understanding of the natural world (science) and the ability to manipulate it (technology) at different points in time. This academic discipline also studies the cultural, economic, and political impacts of and contexts for scientific practices.
Newcastle University is a public research university based in Newcastle upon Tyne, North East England. It has overseas campuses in Singapore and Malaysia. The university is a red brick university and a member of the Russell Group, an association of research-intensive UK universities.
The University of Strathclyde is a public research university located in Glasgow, Scotland. Founded in 1796 as the Andersonian Institute, it is Glasgow's second-oldest university, having received its royal charter in 1964 as the first technological university in the United Kingdom. Taking its name from the historic Kingdom of Strathclyde, its combined enrollment of 25,000 undergraduate and graduate students ranks it Scotland's third-largest university, drawn with its staff from over 100 countries.
Heriot-Watt University is a public research university based in Edinburgh, Scotland. It was established in 1821 as the School of Arts of Edinburgh, the world's first mechanics' institute, and subsequently granted university status by royal charter in 1966. It is the eighth-oldest higher education institution in the United Kingdom. The name Heriot-Watt was taken from Scottish inventor James Watt and Scottish philanthropist and goldsmith George Heriot.
The Royal College of Science and Technology was a higher education college that existed in Glasgow, Scotland between 1887 and 1964. Tracing its history back to the Andersonian Institute, it is the direct predecessor institution of the University of Strathclyde. Its main building on George Street now serves as one of the major academic and administration buildings of the University of Strathclyde.
Queen Margaret University is a university founded in 1875 and currently located in Musselburgh, East Lothian. It is named after the Scottish Queen Saint Margaret.
The University of the Highlands and Islands (UHI) is an integrated, tertiary institution encompassing both further and higher education. It is composed of 12 colleges and research institutions spread around the Highlands and Islands, Moray and Perthshire regions of Scotland. UHI offers further education, undergraduate, postgraduate and research programmes which can be studied at a range of locations across the area and online. It has 31,000 students, including 19,779 further education students and 11,210 higher education students.
A Master of Letters degree is a postgraduate degree.
In some Scottish universities, a Master of Arts is the holder of a degree awarded to undergraduates, usually as a first degree. It follows either a three-year general or four-year Honours degree course in humanities or social sciences and is awarded by one of several institutions.
The Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh (RIE) was established in 1729, and is the oldest voluntary hospital in Scotland. The new buildings of 1879 were claimed to be the largest voluntary hospital in the United Kingdom, and later on, the Empire. The hospital moved to a new 900 bed site in 2003 in Little France. It is the site of clinical medicine teaching as well as a teaching hospital for the University of Edinburgh Medical School. In 1960 the first successful kidney transplant performed in the UK was at this hospital. In 1964 the world's first coronary care unit was established at the hospital. It is the only site for liver, pancreas, and pancreatic islet cell transplantation in Scotland, and one of the country's two sites for kidney transplantation. In 2012, the Emergency Department had 113,000 patient attendances, the highest number in Scotland. It is managed by NHS Lothian.
Aberdeen University School of Medicine, Medical Sciences & Nutrition contains the Medical School and Dental School at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland. It also provides training and carries out research in medical sciences, nutrition, public health, dentistry, health sciences, physician associate studies at BSc, MSc, and PhD levels. The current school was formed from the merger of the former School of Medicine & Dentistry, School of Medical Sciences, and the Rowett Institute of Nutrition.
Lauriston is an area of central Edinburgh, Scotland, and home to a number of significant historic buildings. It lies south of Edinburgh Castle and the Grassmarket, and north of The Meadows public park.
Quartermile is the marketing name given to the mixed use redevelopment of the former Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh site, in Lauriston, Edinburgh. It was master-planned by architect Foster + Partners and takes its name from the fact it is a quarter mile from Edinburgh Castle and the Royal Mile and measures a quarter mile from corner to corner. It was built by Edinburgh developer Qmile Group, a holding company. The scheme comprises a mixture of new build apartments, apartments converted from existing nineteenth-century hospital buildings, new build offices, housing, and retail/leisure uses. Completed in 2018 after more than a decade of construction, it contains 1,050 apartments, 370,000 square feet (34,000 m2) of office space, 65,000 square feet (6,000 m2) of retail and leisure space and seven-acres of open landscape.
The University of Edinburgh Medical School is the medical school of the University of Edinburgh in Scotland and the United Kingdom and part of the College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine. It was established in 1726, during the Scottish Enlightenment, making it the oldest medical school in the United Kingdom and the oldest medical school in the English-speaking world.
The University of Edinburgh Business School is the business school of the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. The university has offered business education since 1919, and the MBA degree since 1980. The business school is tied to the University of Edinburgh, which received its royal charter in 1582.
The University of Edinburgh is a public research university based in Edinburgh, Scotland. Founded by the town council under the authority of a royal charter from King James VI in 1582 and officially opened in 1583, it is one of Scotland's four ancient universities and the sixth-oldest university in continuous operation in the English-speaking world. The university played a crucial role in Edinburgh becoming a leading intellectual centre during the Scottish Enlightenment and contributed to the city being nicknamed the "Athens of the North".
Edinburgh BioQuarter is an initiative in the development of Scotland's life sciences industry, which, as of August 2020, employs more than 39,000 people in over 750 organisations.
The University of Dundee School of Medicine is the school concerned with medical education and clinical research at the University of Dundee in Scotland. In 1967, Dundee's medical school became independent in its own right having started in 1889 as a joint venture between the University of St Andrews and University College Dundee. In 1974 the medical school moved to a large teaching facility based at Ninewells Hospital in the west of Dundee. The School of Medicine now encompasses undergraduate, postgraduate, specialist teaching centres and four research divisions.
Jane Ohlmeyer,, is a historian and academic, specialising in early modern Irish and British history. She is the Erasmus Smith's Professor of Modern History (1762) at Trinity College Dublin and Chair of the Irish Research Council, which funds frontier research across all disciplines.
The Dyson School of Design Engineering is the academic centre for design engineering at Imperial College London. The school has just over 50 academic staff and 400 students, with over 220 undergraduates. The school is located in the Dyson building, at the corner of Exhibition and Imperial College roads.