46th TB Macaulay Lecture - with Kate Raworth

46th TB Macaulay Lecture - with Kate Raworth

46th TB Macaulay Lecture - Kate Raworth

229 followers
By The James Hutton Institute
229 followers
4.8k attendees hosted 📈

Date and time

Wednesday, October 1 · 5 - 9pm GMT+1

Location

Edinburgh International Conference Centre

150 Morrison Street Edinburgh EH3 8EE United Kingdom

About this event

  • Event lasts 4 hours


Speaker biography

Kate Raworth is an ecological economist and creator of the Doughnut - a concept that aims to meet the needs of all people within the means of the living planet - and co-founder of Doughnut Economics Action Lab. Her internationally best-selling book Doughnut Economics: seven ways to think like a 21st century economist has been translated into over 20 languages and has been widely influential with diverse audiences, from the UN General Assembly and Pope Francis to Extinction Rebellion.

Kate is a Senior Teaching Fellow at Oxford University’s Environmental Change Institute and Professor of Practice at Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences. Over the past 30 years, Kate’s career has taken her from working with micro-entrepreneurs in the villages of Zanzibar to co-authoring the Human Development Report for UNDP in New York, followed by a decade as Senior Researcher at Oxfam. She holds a first-class BA in Politics, Philosophy and Economics, and MSc in Economics for Development, both from Oxford University and has honorary doctorates from the University of York, University College Dublin, KU Leuven, and Business School Lausanne.


Event details

The TB Macaulay Lecture is delivered in partnership by the Macaulay Development Trust and The James Hutton Institute. It aims to connect scientific evidence with civic society on the big issues affecting our land and people and specifically to reach those who influence and make decisions on policy.


Date: Wednesday 1 October 2025

Venue: Edinburgh International Conference Centre, EICC

Programme:

1700-1800: Pre-lecture exhibition

1800-1930: 45th TB Macaulay Lecture

1930–2100: Post-lecture reception


The event is free to attend. Please register now to reserve a seat.


Background to the TB Macaulay lecture

The annual TB Macaulay lecture is held to honour the vision of Dr Thomas Bassett Macaulay, President and chairman of the Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada, whose benefaction founded the original Macaulay Institute for Soil Research in 1930. He was a descendant of the Macaulays from the Island of Lewis and his aim was to improve the productivity of Scottish Agriculture. This vision continues today in its successor the James Hutton Institute, a world-leader in land, crop, water, environmental and socio-economics science.






Accessibility note

We aim to make events as accessible as possible. If you have any accessibility requirements or questions about how we can support you in attending our events, please contact events@hutton.ac.uk.


Photography/filming

Please note that the event organiser and events partners will be taking photographs/filming during this event. The photographs/video recordings may be used for publicity, promotional and business development purposes in print and digital media formats including publications, reports, tenders, websites, promotional material and social media. If you have any concerns, please contact events@hutton.ac.uk.


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If you have any questions contact events@hutton.ac.uk.

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Organized by

229 followers
4.8k attendees hosted

The James Hutton Institute is at the forefront of meeting the global challenges of providing food, energy and water from finite land and natural resources. The institute is a world-leading scientific research organisation focused on land, crops, water and the environment.

Our strengths in land, crop, waters, environmental and socio-economic sciences enable a broad range of science disciplines to interconnect, delivering knowledge, products and services that improve the quality of life.

In partnership with people, organisations and governments, our work enhances sustainable environmental, social and economic development, delivering practical solutions for our shared future and influencing the agenda for land use and development for the 21st Century.

FreeOct 1 · 5:00 PM GMT+1