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Independent UK charity From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Daphne Jackson Trust is an independent UK charity[1] based in the Physics Department at the University of Surrey.
Founded | 1992 |
---|---|
Founder | Daphne Jackson |
Location |
|
Area served | UK |
Key people | Katie Perry (Chief Executive) Teresa Anderson (Chair of Trustees) |
Website | daphnejackson |
It was established in 1992[2] to provide Fellowships to scientists, technologists, engineers and mathematicians to return them to their careers after a career break of over two years taken for family, caring or health reasons. The Daphne Jackson Trust arranges salaried, part-time Fellowships, usually held over two years, which are normally based at a university or industrial laboratory throughout the UK. Fellows undertake a supervised research project with a retraining programme.[3] The Trust's work is highly praised by Government and the charity is acknowledged as running the foremost returners' scheme in the country.[citation needed] The Trust's Fellowship scheme has been recognised as an exemplar model for returnships; over the past 30 years, it supported over 370 Daphne Jackson Fellows return to their careers.
The Fellowship scheme was started by Daphne Jackson, the first female professor of physics in the UK.[4] Over the course of her career she met many clever and highly qualified scientists who were reduced to taking low-level jobs because they had taken a career break. Drawing attention to this frustrating situation, Jackson observed, "Imagine a society that would allow Marie Curie to stack shelves in a supermarket simply because she took a career break for family reasons."[5] Deciding that this was a waste of talent and investment, in 1985 she began a pilot scheme that enabled women to return to their careers.
The pilot scheme enabled talented women to return to their careers in science, engineering and technology (SET)[6] after a break by offering Fellowships composed of a retraining programme linked to a challenging research or development project, with the overall focus put firmly on improving future employment potential of the individual. The key objective was that the Fellowship should help re-establish professional expertise as well as personal confidence, within an appropriately supportive environment, with significantly improved job prospects at the end. A total of 27 fellows successfully completed fellowships during the pilot scheme, which ran during the late 1980s.
Jackson left a legacy after her death in 1991 which enabled the Daphne Jackson Trust to be established in 1992. The physicist Elizabeth (Betty) Johnson was a major force in the establishment of the Daphne Jackson Trust. Johnson had been one of the first Daphne Jackson Fellows in 1986 at Imperial College London.[2] Betty Johnson was appointed a MBE in the Queen's Birthday Honours list of 2002 in recognition of this work.[7]
The Trust named its 100th fellow in 2002[8] and has gone on to work with many more returners. The Trust took its first male fellow in 2003,[9][10] and now works with both men and women. In 2016 the Trust celebrated thirty years of Daphne Jackson Fellowships.
The charity's Chief Executive is Katie Perry.
A board of Trustees governs the Daphne Jackson Trust.
The Daphne Jackson Trust holds a Research Conference every two years.
The Patrons of the Daphne Jackson Trust are: Dame Athene Donald DBE, Vivienne Parry OBE, Maggie Philbin OBE.
The Daphne Jackson Trust was established as a Charity in 1992, Charity Number 1009605.[11] The Trust was incorporated as a Company Limited by Guarantee in 2008. The Charity Number was changed and its new status became effective from 1 December 2008.
Registered by the Charity Commission as the Daphne Jackson Memorial Fellowships Trust with Charity Number 1125867.[1]
The Daphne Jackson Trust's sponsors and hosts include universities, research councils, learned societies/professional institutions, industry and charities.
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