Charlie Jeffery

University of York
Vice-Chancellor and President

Biography

Professor Charlie Jeffery became Vice-Chancellor and President at the University of York in September 2019. He joined York from the University of Edinburgh where he had been Senior Vice-Principal since 2014. Prior to that, he was Vice-Principal (Public Policy) having been Professor of Politics at Edinburgh since 2004.

Professor Jeffery's portfolio at Edinburgh spanned the development of strategy and policy, including roles in strategic and financial planning, student experience, and internal engagement and communications. He also had overarching responsibility in external relations, including economic development, widening participation, public affairs and international strategy.

His key achievements include driving interdisciplinary collaborations; like the positioning of Edinburgh's expertise in data science to underpin a regional economic vision. He also played a pivotal role in the development of the £1.3bn Edinburgh City Deal that included a £237m Government investment in Edinburgh's Data Science programme.

Expertise

Regionalism

Posts by this author

Smith Contributions - Purpose-built by accident

Lord Smith is due to present his report on proposed additional powers for the Scottish Parliament on 27 November. In the first of a series of blogs taken from our upcoming Smith contributions e-book, Charlie Jeffery considers how the politics of fifteen years of devolution will determine the outcome.

English Votes on English Laws: the English constitutional preference?

Professor Charlie Jeffery and Professor Richard Wyn Jones reflect on the devolution debate that took place on the 14th October at the House of Commons, and the ‘English Question’.

Taking England Seriously: the 2014 Future of England Survey

Professor Charlie Jeffery reflects on the key findings of the 2014 Future of England Survey as debate on the constitutional question – and UKIP’s rise – unfolds in England.

Do the Conservatives Hold the Key to a Deal in the Smith Commission?

Professor Charlie Jeffery argues that the Conservative Party now occupies the middle ground among party views on more devolution in Scotland.

After the Scottish Referendum: A Constitutional Chain Reaction Unfolds

Charlie Jeffery analyses the constitutional chain reaction that we now see unfolding before us.

Scotland's Decision: A constitutional chain reaction part II

So Scotland voted no. Yes won 45% of the vote, significantly short of a majority and indeed what most of the polls in the run-up to the referendum suggested.