NUI Galway has announced the appointment of Professor Jim Livesey as vice-president for research and innovation. Prof Livesey joins from the University of Dundee, where he served as dean of humanities since 2014.

Hailing from Cork city, Prof Livesey holds two degrees and a master's in history from University College Cork, and a PhD in modern history from Harvard University. 

Professor Jim Livesey, vice-president for research and innovation, NUI Galway

Since then he has had a varied career, with posts at Harvard, Trinity, and Sussex as well as research and visiting appointments in France, the US, and China. He will bring his global experience, and his background in research leadership, to bear on the strategic development of NUI Galway.

Transformative effect

Prof Livesey is a global historian, whose research focus centres on the transformative effect of new kinds of knowledge for collective action.

His work has examined the process of democratisation, the creation of the concept of civil society, and most recently, looked at science, technology and finance in provincial Europe.

He refers to himself as an applied eighteenth-century historian, and his research has opened doors for partnership-based work in the creative economy, particularly as co-director of Dundee’s InGAME: Innovation for Games and Media Enterprise. The £11.5 million creative research and development centre is based on the experience and expertise surrounding the Scottish city’s games cluster.

Prof Livesey will now lead NUI Galway’s research and innovation mission, building on the university’s significant successes in recent years.

He takes on the new role just as the EU’s Horizon Europe funding programme for research and innovation launches, where the university will look to build on its success in the Horizon 2020 programme.

Prof Livesey said: ”I am delighted to take on this responsibility at NUI Galway. I’ve admired the creativity and quality of the research here for many years.

Sustainability and excellence

"The values of respect, openness, sustainability and excellence that animate the university are solid foundations on which to build research of global significance, with national and regional impact.

"I look forward to working with the research teams in the university as well as regional, national, and international partners as we identify where Galway can make the greatest contribution to research across the domains.”

NUI Galway has over 2,500 staff and students engaged in research across multiple disciplines, and an international reputation for being research-driven. The university has significantly developed the innovation and entrepreneurship landscape, including business incubation and spin-out activity.

President of NUI Galway, Professor Ciarán Ó hÓgartaigh, said: "We warmly welcome Professor Jim Livesey to NUI Galway and look forward to working with him in our collective contribution to our university community and for the public good as we embark on the next chapter of our research journey as a university.

"Prof Livesey brings immense experience in research management, grant capture, and stakeholder engagement to his new post. He has extensive experience of international research collaboration and of researcher development.

"He will offer a strong voice representing the research community in the university’s senior management as well as among policy makers nationally and internationally.

"Given his track record of high quality research and publication, he will promote excellence in research and innovation, respect for the evidence, openness to developing and disseminating new ideas and sustaining our research culture and institutions, true to the university’s values.”

Prior to joining the University of Dundee as professor of history in 2013, Prof Livesey undertook academic roles in the University of Sussex, Harvard University and Trinity College Dublin in the fields of global history, French history, Atlantic history, intellectual history, creative economies research. 

To hear more about research and innovation at NUI Galway visit: http://www.nuigalway.ie/our-research/.