Photo of Fiona Millar

Fiona Millar (Chair)

Fiona Millar is a journalist specialising in education and parenting issues. She started her career on the Mirror Group's graduate training scheme then worked on the Daily Mirror and the Daily Express, as a news reporter, lobby correspondent and freelance feature writer. She co-authored a book of interviews with prominent women' By Faith and Daring' with Glenys Kinnock in 1993.

Between 1997 and 2003 she worked at Downing Street as a special adviser to the Prime Minister. She now writes a column in Education Guardian, is a contributor to the Guardian comment pages, LBC radio, and regularly takes part in television and radio debates about education..

Fiona wrote and presented a film "The Best for My Child" about parental choice for Channel Four in 2004 and has presented several programmes for Teachers TV about parents and schools. In 2006 she co-authored a pamphlet for the pressure group Compass about comprehensive education. Fiona is a governor of two schools in North London, where she lives with her partner and three children and is currently writing a book about women returning to work after children.

Professor Janet Walker (Vice Chair)

Janet Walker is Emeritus Professor of Family Policy at Newcastle University and a Strategic Research Advisor in the Institute of Health and Society. Between 1985 and 2005, she was the Director of the Newcastle Centre for Family Studies.

Together with colleagues in her research team she has conducted over 40 studies on family life and relationships including marriage and divorce, domestic violence, family mediation, counselling, family communication and post-divorce parenting. In recent years she directed the evaluations of the Family Advice and Information Service, Youth Inclusion and Support Panels and Family Group Conferencing. She is currently evaluating several new programmes in children's services for the DCSF. She is on the Board of Trustees of the National Academy for Parenting Practitioners (NAPP) and is a member of the Social Security Advisory Committee.

Laurie Edmans CBE (Hon Treasurer)

Laurie Edmans has had a long career in financial services. Formerly deputy chief executive of a mutual life insurer and chair of the industry body on pensions, he now has portfolio of commercial and public interest roles. These include the board of the Pensions Regulator, chair of the Safe Home Income Plans group, trusteeship of two pension schemes and of the Quest School for Autistic Children. He has a continuing involvement with the Financial Services Authority's Consumer Financial Capability work. He received a CBE for services to pensions reform in 2006. He has five children and, currently, five grandchildren

David Altschuler

David Altschuler, joined Marks and Spencer plc as Group Treasurer in 1977. In 1980 he jointly founded National Leasing & Finance Co, and has subsequently been responsible for setting up a number of projects, including the Capricorn Science Park in Cape Town, South Africa, and bio-technology companies Inpharmatica Ltd and Arrow Therapeutics Ltd, in partnership with University College London. He was founding chairman of the charity Refusenik. He is the chairman of the board of trustees of the One to One Children's Fund, and the PATA (Paediatric Aids Treatment for Africa) Initiative, which he co-founded. He is also a director of the New Israel Fund Ltd., the School of Government and Policy at Tel-Aviv University, and a trustee of Nicro UK Trust.

Dr John Coleman OBE

John Coleman trained as a clinical psychologist at the Middlesex Hospital, and obtained his PhD from University College, London in 1966. He was a Senior Lecturer at the Royal London Hospital (University of London) for 14 years, and he has also been the Director of a therapeutic community for troubled adolescents. In 1989 he founded the Trust for the Study of Adolescence, an independent research and training organisation based in Brighton, and was Director until he retired in October, 2005.

He was the Editor of the Journal of Adolescence from 1984-2000, and has written widely on topics to do with young people. His textbook "The nature of adolescence", published by Routledge, is now in its third edition, and he is also well known as the author of "Key data on adolescence" the fifth edition of which was published in 2005.

Since 1997 he has worked closely with Government, and he is currently Deputy Chair of the Independent Advisory Group for the Teenage Pregnancy Unit. During 2005 he worked part-time as a Policy Advisor at the Dept of Health. He was awarded an OBE in 2001 for services to youth justice. In October 2006 he took up a post at Oxford University as Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Education. He is the Chair of the recently formed Association for Young People's Health, and a trustee of the National Academy for Parenting Practitioners.

Dr Joanne Drean

Dr Joanne Drean is Deputy Director for Anti-social Behaviour and Crime Prevention (jncluding youth crime). She is the Home Office lead for children and young people and her team is producing the cross-Departmental Youth Crime Action Plan. Previously she was Chief Executive of CICA; and Deputy Director for victims of crime in the Office for Criminal Justice Reform.

Professor Leon Feinstein

Leon Feinstein is Professor of Education and Social Policy at the Institute of Education, University of London. Since Jan 2008 he has been on secondment to the Ministry of Justice, acting as Assistant Director in the Office for Criminal Justice Reform. From 2005-2007 he was Director of the Centre for Research on the Wider Benefits of Learning, a centre funded by the UK Government's Department for Children, Schools and Families and others to investigate the social and personal effects of education. He has conducted research on the importance of schools and other formal and informal learning institutions for social justice, health, social cohesion, family formation and wider well-being. Much of his research has focused on the role of parents, schools and wider social networks in the intergenerational transmission of inequality and on appropriate policy responses. He is an associate of the Centre for the Analysis of Pathways from Childhood to Adulthood at the University of Michigan.

Penelope Gibbs

Penelope Gibbs is presently Director of the Voluntary Action Media Unit, part of the charity TimeBank. VAMU is a three year project, the aim of which is to investigate and improve the relationship between the media and the voluntary sector, with a particular focus on volunteering. The project has two other charity partners, the Media Trust and the Institute for Volunteering Research and is managed by a Project Board, chaired by Mark Thompson, Director General of the BBC.

Before becoming Director of VAMU Penelope worked for the BBC for 12 years. Latterly she has worked for BBC Strategy and Distribution as Manager of a project on how the BBC met the needs of its disabled audiences. Before working in Strategy Penelope was a Senior Producer and Executive Producer in BBC Factual Radio, where she was involved in Woman's Hour, You and Yours, the Learning Curve and similar programmes. And before working at the BBC worked in the advertising industry for 4 years.

Penelope is also a magistrate on the bench at Highbury, London. has two children, aged nine and eleven and lives in Kentish Town.

Jackie Kelly

Jackie Kelly is the Chief Executive of Ekaya Housing Association.

Ekaya Housing Association provides accommodation and support services for young mothers and their children in eight London boroughs. Ekaya is seen as the market leader in the provision of support and accommodation for young parents and our 49-place community nursery initiative on the St. Martins Estate is regarded as good practice example of working with the community to meet their needs.

Jackie is a member of the Teenage Pregnancy Unit's Independent Advisory Group; a Board member of:

  • Federation of Black Housing Organisations (FBHO); and
  • Hillside Housing Association.

Jackie is also Chair of the South London Federation of Small Housing Associations "SOLFED", and Secretary of the Women Housing Forum – London.

Professor Ann Phoenix

Professor Ann Phoenix is Professor of Social and Developmental Psychology at the Open University. Her research interests centre on social identities, including those of race, ethnicity, gender and motherhood. Her publications include Black, White or Mixed Race? (with Barbara Tizard, 2nd ed. 2002 and 1993), and Young Masculinities with Stephen Frosh and Rob Pattman (2002).

Anne Weyman OBE

Anne Weyman is Chair of the NICE Programme Development Group for Personal Social and Health Education and Vice Chair of the Independent Advisory Group on Sexual Health and HIV. She is also a non-executive director of Islington Primary Care Trust. Anne was previously Chief Executive of fpa (The Family Planning Association) and Information and Public Affairs Director at the National Children's Bureau, where she founded the Sex Education Forum, of which she is now President, and the Drug Education Forum.

In 2000, Anne was awarded an OBE for services to Family Planning and in 2005 she was made an Honorary Doctor of Laws by the University of Bristol, in recognition of her contribution to women's rights.

 

 

 

 

April 2008

Last updated: 11th July 2008 at 02:07:51