Michael Hastings, Baron Hastings of Scarisbrick
Michael John Hastings, Baron Hastings of Scarisbrick, CBE (born 29 January 1958), is currently the Professor of Leadership at the Stephen R. Covey Leadership Centre at Huntsman Business School, USA, and sits on the Concordia Leadership Council. He served as Chancellor of Regent's University London from October 2016 to October 2021. He has been appointed as the current Chair of the SOAS (School of Oriental and African Studies) Board of Trustees and is an NED at Saxton Bampfylde. He is also a Vice President at UNICEF UK and a trustee for the Africa Philanthropy Foundation. He is the former Head of Public Affairs at the BBC and was their first head of Corporate Social Responsibility, serving for 12 years. He also served as the Global Head of Citizenship for KPMG for 13 years and is a former Trustee of the Vodafone Group Foundation, and subsequently a Governor of the Vodafone/Safaricom M-PESA Academy in Nairobi for 800 of Kenya's poorest children. Hastings began his career as a teacher and then worked across government agencies on policies to build racial equality, being a Commissioner with the Commission for Racial Equality for nine years, workforce development working alongside the Government on urban renewal, and safer and more effective crime prevention strategies founding Crime Concern and Catch22, having been a trustee and Chairman of Crime Concern for 21 years. He is co-founder of My Brother's Keeper – an in-depth ongoing in-prison service and support network building better outcomes for insiders. He chairs the London Chamber of Commerce and Industry's Black Business Association, and also the Advisory Board of the Black Business Institute. He served as an NED on BT's Board for Responsible and Sustainable Business for nine years. In 2021, he became President of UKCF, the UK's Community Foundations network, and separately a Freeman of the Worshipful Company of Haberdashers in the City of London. He was appointed CBE (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) in 2003 for services to crime reduction, and appointed to the House of Lords in 2005 as an independent peer. He received the UNICEF Award in 2005 for Services to Africa's Children, and in 2014 received a Doctorate in Civil Law from the University of Kent, Canterbury, in recognition for his leadership at KPMG and the BBC and for his work in international development and corporate responsibility. In 2019, he was the inaugural recipient of the Stephen R Covey Leadership Award for a life built on principles and effective leadership in business and public life. Early lifeFamily and personal lifeHis father was born in Angola and educated in Somerset and Edinburgh, where he qualified as a dental surgeon. From there, he went to Jamaica where he met his wife who was one of his patients. In 1954, they moved back to the UK, where Hastings was born in 1958. In 1966, the British government was funding professionals to move to Jamaica. His father took the opportunity to return, where he settled in Montego Bay where they built their new home. However, in 1970 a pro-Russian/pro-Cuban government was voted into power and very soon the USA, with memories of the Cuban Bay of Pigs crisis, created a trade blockade of the island which very soon descended into economic chaos forcing the family to return their two sons once more to the UK. EducationHastings attended Scarisbrick Hall School in Lancashire. While at Scarisbrick, school Principal Charles Oxley asked him to survey a week's television, looking out for swearing, sex, blasphemy, etc. Oxley was Vice President of the National Viewers and Listeners Association, and his results were passed on to Mary Whitehouse, co-founder of the organisation, to support her campaign to promote "better standards" on television.[1] Having taken his A-Levels, Hastings attended a Theological College in London but soon moved on to study teacher training at Westminster College, Oxford, before spending five years teaching at a London comprehensive school. Journalism and business careerHastings began his career as a teacher at Greenway Secondary School in Uxbridge (now Uxbridge High School, London), then, in 1986, moved into government service, supporting policy initiatives to bring employment and development to Britain's inner cities. In 1990, with his specialist expertise in journalism becoming increasingly known, he was invited by the Chairman of TV-am to join as a producer of programmes looking at school failures. TV-am lost the franchise after one year but Hastings stayed as a presenter on the 6 to 7 am show. He moved to the BBC, where he worked on the weekly Around Westminster programme as its presenter. From being in front of the camera, he was invited by the Director General[citation needed] to now go behind the camera to lobby for the BBC's Charter Renewal and oversaw the annual fee increases. He also fought off the Murdoch empire's desire to get all premier sports onto subscription and saw the legal provision for listed sports events such as Wimbledon, Cricket, and the Olympics protected for free-to-air viewing.[citation needed] And then GMTV as a chief political correspondent and then the BBC in 1994 as a presenter of the weekly Around Westminster programme, before joining the BBC Corporate Affairs Division in 1996. Hastings is a former trustee of the Vodafone Group Foundation, and previously served for nine years on the Board for Responsible and Sustainable Business at British Telecom (BT). He first represented KPMG International on the Global Corporate Citizenship Committee of the World Economic Forum (WEF) from 2008 to 2010, and was a board director of the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) from 2010 to 2012. In 2009, he became a member of the World Economic Forum's Global Council on Diversity and Talent; in 2010 he served on the "Global Agenda Council on the Next Generation"; and in 2011 he became a member of the World Economic Forum's Global Agenda Council on the Role of Business. From 2012 to 2014 he led the WEF Agenda Council – The Future of Civil Society, as vice chairman. Hastings is also a global advisor to the Harambe Entrepreneur Alliance.[2] Hastings was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2002 New Year Honours[3] in recognition of his services to crime reduction, including 15 years as chairman and 21 years as a trustee of Crime Concern. He led the merger of Crime Concern with the Rainer Foundation to create the charity Catch22. He served on the Commission for Racial Equality for nine years as a commissioner (1993–2001). He is listed as one of the 100 most influential black people in Britain and No. 6 on the 2016 list of 100 Black British Business Leaders.[4] Political and philanthropic careerIn February 1986, Hastings received a phone call from the PM's adviser to work alongside the Government and help deal with the problems surrounding the urban riots of the time (1981/1985) arising from a sense of frustration by disenfranchised young black men.[citation needed] He was called to strategic meetings No10, and gave up teaching going into largely black areas to build confidence and trust among these disadvantaged communities, which he did for five years. As someone who for a long time was always meeting and being in contact with politicians, he was first approached by Paddy Ashdown MP in his resignation honours options to consider a life peerage under Lib Dem patronage but turned down the offer.[citation needed] He was later offered a peerage by other senior political figures but declined once more as it was politically aligned.[citation needed] Eventually, however, he was approached by the Independent Appointments Commission, accepted their offer, and was elevated to the Peerage in December 2005, taking the title of his boarding school.[citation needed] House of LordsIn 2005, Hastings was awarded a peerage to the House of Lords by Queen Elizabeth II,[5][6] where he sits as a crossbencher. In the same year he also received the UNICEF award from the UK Chancellor for his "outstanding contribution to understanding and effecting solutions for Africa's children". Hastings is Chairman of the Council of ZANE, a development aid agency focused on Zimbabwe, and vice president of Tear Fund. In 2011, he became vice president of UNICEF, the UN Children's and Education Fund. Hastings was chairman of Millennium Promise UK and a member of the global Millennium Promise board. In 2010, he was a leading advisor to the Chatham House enquiry into the Future Role of the UK in Foreign Affairs. He sat on the council of the Overseas Development Institute in the UK and previously on the Center for Global Development in the US. HonoursIn 2014, Hastings was conferred with a doctorate in civil law from the University of Kent,[7] Canterbury, in recognition for his leadership at KPMG, and the BBC on International Development and Corporate Responsibility. He was installed as the Chancellor of Regent's University London in February 2017.[4] References
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