Title
Correspondence from Anderson with attached report "Genetically modified foods and human health" Medical Research Council
Reference
MS/2144/03/05
Production date
-05-2000 - -06-2000
Creator
- Medical Research CouncilBiographyBiography
The Medical Research Council (MRC), formerly the Medical Research Committee, is a government-sponsored national funding body for medical research in Britain.
The Medical Research Committee was established on 20 June 1913 as an independent body responsible for the organisation of state-funded medical research. The financial support for this work was provided by a subsection of the 1911 National Insurance Act, which set aside £57,000 a year for research purposes. Although initially earmarked for combatting tuberculosis (TB), the Committee was given the freedom to pursue a much broader set of investigations into health and disease. In 1914, Cambridge physiologist Walter Morley Fletcher (1873-1933) was appointed the first Secretary of the Committee. In the same year, work began on the construction of a central research institute for the Committee in Hampstead, London, which opened as the National Institute for Medical Research (NIMR) in 1920.
After the First World War, the Committee was implicated in larger-scale debates about the reorganisation of government and public services. The Machinery of Government Committee, also known as the Haldane Committee, determined that the Medical Research Committee should remain independent of departmental oversight and separate from the recently established Ministry of Health. This decision was confirmed by the granting of a Royal Charter to the newly-christened Medical Research Council on 20 March 1920. The Charter freed the MRC from its original financial provisions under the 1911 Act and instead provided direct parliamentary funding at the discretion of the Committee of Privy Council for Medical Research. In practice, the Privy Council exerted little influence on the day-to-day running of the MRC, with research priorities and staff appointments largely made in-house.
While the Second World War (1939-1945) and the foundation of the National Health Service (NHS) in 1948 encouraged closer collaboration between the MRC and government departments, the Council’s autonomy remained largely intact throughout the twentieth-century. Following the 1965 Science and Technology Act and the subsequent abolition of the Privy Council, funding authority over the MRC passed to the Secretary of State for Education and Science. Following a series of departmental closures and mergers in the 1990s, 2000s, and 2010s, financial responsibility for the MRC has been held by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy since 2016.
- Anderson, MalcolmBiographyBiography
Extent
2 items
Language
English
Level of description
ITEM
Repository name
Science Museum, London
Associated people and organisations
- Crute, IanBiographyBiography
(b.1949) Plant Pathologist
Formerly the Director of Rothamsted Research, Professor Crute is the Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board's Chief Scientist. At Rothamstead Research Crute’s responsibilities were for all scientific, operational, commercial and external liaison activities of the institute. This was a role Crute held since 1999 through most of the GM debate. The crop portfolio at Rothamstead covered cereals, oilseeds, sugar beet, potatoes, willow and miscanthus and input into tropical crops.
Crute achieved a First-Class Honours degree in botany and a PhD in plant pathology from the University of Newcastle upon Tyne. He was a research group leader in plant pathology at what is now Warwick-HRI from 1973 to 1986. In 1986 he obtained a Fulbright Fellowship and went to the University of Wisconsin in Madison, USA to work on the genetics of resistance to fungal pathogens. On his return to England a year later he moved to HRI East Malling as Head of the Crop and Environment Protection Department. In 1993 he decided to move back to HRI at Warwick and spent two years as Head of Plant Pathology before he was promoted to Director at Wellesbourne with overall responsibility for the research direction at the site.
Crute's scientific contributions are recorded in over 160 publications and has been awarded the Research Medal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England in 1992 and the British Crop Production Council Medal in 2006. He was elected as President of the British Society for Plant Pathology in 1995 and was honoured with a Visiting Professorship in the Faculty of Biological Sciences at the University of Oxford. His committee and board memberships include: Chairman of the Sainsbury Laboratory Council, member of the Lead Expert Group on the “Future of Food and Farming” Foresight project and Board member of HGCA’s Crop Evaluation Ltd.
Subject
Conditions governing access
Open Access
Conditions governing Reproduction
Copies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions
Finding aids
Box 3