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Phil Rees

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Title: Phil Rees


1
Phil Rees
  • A remarkable career
  • School of Geography, University of Leeds,
    1970-2009

2
Spot the difference?
1970-1980 Lecturer
1990-present Professor
1980-1990 Reader
3
Colleagues (rogues) galleryStaff in School of
Geography 197?
4
Staff Review 1970s style
Departmental mafia evaluating Phils performance
5
  • Ford Anglia Man
  • (from Mike Batty, University College, London)
  • Phil came to Reading to present his work in
    our departmental seminar in 1971 or was it 1972?
    He drove down from Leeds in his Ford Anglia and
    he stayed in our house for the night.
  • I didnt drive in those days and used to take
    the bus to work which was only two miles away.
    But I decided Phil could drive me and himself
    back to our house using a shortcut ..

6
Ford Anglia Man Silence is Golden
  • I remember driving parallel to the M4
    motorway which had only just been opened and we
    succeeded in driving at least ten miles to get
    back to the house.
  • Phil never said a word about this but I remember
    thinking that he must think I am a right wally
    for not knowing where I lived and somewhere in
    all of this we also had to pick up a Chinese
    takeaway.
  • He departed the next morning no worse for the
    experience but a long drive back to Leeds. We
    dont remember just how long the trains took in
    the old days.

Mike Batty
7
Meeting with Royalty
Phil, with Alex Hirschfield, preparing to explain
the principles of multi-state accounts-based
models in less than 2 minutes to the Duchess of
Kent and the VC (Edward Parkes)
8
Remember this? The in(famous) 3D model of ???
9
Field course 1978
Livingston New Town
10
Phil in full flow on top of Arthurs Seat
11
THE Senior Sage
from Ludi Simpson, University of Sheffield
  • Phil has been THE senior sage throughout my
    thirty years working with local population
    accounts and projections. He has always been
    evidently motivated by practical problems, which
    for me first arose as the demographic research
    officer at Bradford Council. His pushing hard at
    the edges of model-ability have kept many of us
    on our toes.
  • Above all he has provided frameworks which
    highlighted the nature of my limited efforts, and
    shown the directions in which I might be able to
    go to improve them. His period as Census
    Programme Co-ordinator for the academic sector
    were a golden period of engagement, confidence
    and understanding .

12
THE Senior Sage Yes, we can!
  • Among my fond memories is his design of a
    West Yorkshire population model, responding to
    every request for design features from the local
    authorities who commissioned the model with a wry
    smile and a 'Yes that's possible'.
  • Phil laps up challenges like he is always in
    need of more food. My biggest laugh was when
    applying for a job at Leeds University and being
    warned that I might be seen as competition to
    Phil superfluous maybe, but competition never!
  • Ludi Simpson

13
Good Colleague
from Deborah Phillips, University of Leeds
  • Many thanks for your support over the years and
    for being such a good colleague. I've enjoyed
    working with you on doctoral supervisions (the
    good and the more challenging ones!) and on
    projects.
  • Your calm and efficient management of the large
    team of assistants on the urban crime project
    many years ago is an enduring memory, and I've
    sought to emulate this in my project management
    ever since.
  • With all good wishes
  • Debbie

14
Highly Productive
from Chris Denham, previous Office for National
Statistics member
  • What a phenomenal output!
  • How do you do it all?
  • Chris

15
Our Man in Hong Kong
  • In 2007 Phil represented the Royal
    Geographical Societys Population Geography
    Research Group at the 4th International
    Population Geographies Conference held at the
    Chinese University of Hong Kong.
  • The following photograph shows Phil with
    Professor Yue-Man Yeung, Director of the Hong
    Kong Institute of Asian-Pacific Studies and Head
    of Shaw College, CUHK.
  • Phil and Professor Yeung first met as doctoral
    students in Chicago.

16
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17
By Royal Appointment
This photograph shows Phil and distinguished
historical geographer, Professor Robin Butlin,
outside Buckingham Palace having received honours
from the Queen
18
Notetaker Extraordinaire
from Leo van Wissen University Groningen,
formerly at NIDI, the Hague
  • Phil is an outstanding geographer, and I am
    proud to have had the honour of working with him
    on various projects in the past. But it is the
    small things that most clearly typify people and
    that makes you realise who they are, instead of
    what they are.
  • What, to me, is so characteristic about Phil is
    that wherever I meet him in a conference,
    workshop, or elsewhere, and no matter to whom he
    is listening and he is one of the best listeners
    I know - he always makes notes in his
    notebooks.....

19
Notetaker Extraordinaire
  • ...... Moreover, using these notes, he always
    asks questions to everyone he is listening to, in
    a very thoughtful and respectful way.
  • By now he must have filled hundreds of these
    notebooks.
  • I admire him a lot for that, since for me this
    level of attention and organization is outside of
    my capabilities.
  • Phil, I do hope that you will fill a few
    additional notebooks in the coming years, to be
    used in leisurely research projects of your
    choice.

Leo van Wissen
20
1990s but precisely which year?
21
Innovative and Enduring
from Adrian Bailey, University of Leeds
  • Throughout his career as a population geographer
    Phil has contributed innovative and enduring
    research.
  • This started at the University of Chicago at a
    time when Geography struggled to gain purchase on
    issues of segregation and community dynamics,
    continued with Phils engagement with the second
    demographic transition and the implications of
    ageing across Europe, and goes forward with his
    contribution to ethnic population change and the
    balance between population change and
    environmental planning in London

22
Innovative and Enduringpotent vintage
  • . As his students and colleagues will tell
    you, Phils approach is a particular blend of
    painstaking assumptions, some equations, a dash
    of Fortran 5 and copious, always copious,
    briefings mixed, of course, with notes of
    humility, sardonism and levity.
  • Its proved a potent vintage and the good news
    is, its one still in production, albeit on a
    more bespoke scale.
  • So Phil thats quite a journey from the Dan
    Ryan Expressway and Robert Taylor Homes to the
    Number 96 and the leafy lanes of Cookridge but
    your vintage continues to make the world a better
    place, forecast by forecast. Thanks!

Adrian Bailey
23
Grand Master
from Sir Alan Wilson, University College London
  • Phil and I joined the Geography Department at
    the same time 1st October 1970 - and quickly
    set up an excellent working relationship as part
    of the (then) new wave of quantitative
    geographers.
  • In the early days it was cemented by some games
    of chess at lunch times, some of which stretched
    into the afternoon a demonstration, I think, as
    in everything else, of Phils absolute
    determination to do things well and properly!

24
  • . Our working collaboration was fantastic. I
    have enjoyed some good collaborations in my time
    but the work we did in population geography that
    culminated in Spatial Population Analysis was a
    terrific experience.
  • Phil, of course, has gone from strength to
    strength and become the UK expert in the
    population field. I cant really believe that he
    is going to retire, but whatever the future
    holds, it will be interesting and I wish him well!

Sir Alan Wilson
25
The Lion Shrine
TIME-OUT FROM DIALOG-PLUS PROJECT MEETING,
PENN STATE 2005
The Penn State Creamery
Why does Phil have a bright light hovering
over his ice-cream? Perhaps it was that elusive
nugget the Dialog-PLUS team spent days trying
to define!
26
A dedicated mentor
from Helen Durham, University of Leeds
  • After 13 years of working alongside Phil, to me
    the name Phil Rees is synonymous with the
    School of Geography.
  • He has been a supportive and dedicated mentor,
    PI, colleague and Head of School and his
    retirement will leave a big gap though I am sure
    he will be back for project meetings for some
    time to come!
  • Best wishes for a happy retirement, Phil.

27
Always keen to help
from Adam Dennett, School of Geography,
University of Leeds
  • One lasting memory I have of Phil goes back
    to when I first met him as a Masters student on
    his census analysis course.
  • As part of the final project assessment piece I
    had devised myself a particularly devilish
    problem of trying to convert 1991 enumeration
    district data to 2001 super output areas and had
    managed to get myself horrifically bogged down
    with postcodes and address counts coming out of
    my ears!
  • I remember emailing Phil and asking him if he
    could spare a little time so I could explain my
    problem. He emailed me back straight away and
    told me to drop by that afternoon ..

28
Always keen to help
  • I duly turned up armed with SPSS
    files, and Phil dropped what he was doing and
    listened to my problem. I then remember Phil
    rolling up his sleeves (if not physically then
    metaphorically), breaking out the biblically
    proportioned SPSS user manual, and then spending
    the best part of two and a half hours trying to
    help me solve my problem!
  • I remember feeling humbled that someone of
    Phils stature would down tools and spend that
    length of time helping a lowly Masters student.
    We never did solve the problem using that
    particular method it was concluded that too
    many man hours were required. Now that Phils
    retiring, however, .

Adam Dennett
29
Crafty striker
from Nico Keilman
The Hague, October 1983. Guest visitor at the
NIDI. I had asked each member of Phil's team to
wear a white shirt!
My wife
30
Phil scores after an elegant combination with my
wife. Note how confused the blue team's
goalkeeper is (thats me!) after Phil's bender!
Nico Keilman
31
Extensive coverage
from Peter Boden, Edge Analytics
  • As an undergraduate at the University of Leeds,
    I first met Phil in 1982.
  • Blackboards and chalk were still in use and, in
    lectures, Phil would confront us with a long,
    hand-written list of topics that he was scheduled
    to cover in the course of an hour. Phil rarely
    got beyond item 3!
  • His undergraduate courses were an inspiration,
    however providing a first introduction to
    computer programming and data analysis and a
    unique grounding in demographic principles and
    methods. .

32
  • As a postgraduate, the Stillwell and Rees
    combination provided me with a springboard for
    career development advancing my demographic
    knowledge and project management skills whilst
    motivating me to work hard to achieve.
  • I am just one of hundreds of students who have
    been influenced by Phils diligent and supportive
    approach to teaching and research.
  • Phil and I continue to collaborate on some
    fascinating research and consultancy projects.
    He remains a great source of knowledge, advice
    and support. He is definitely too young to
    retire

Peter Boden
33
IT Manager
from Tim Hadwin, Adelaide, Australia
  • When SoG was in its infancy regarding IT - Phil
    was the IT manager.
  • We had to lay a cable from SoG to the Textile
    Building over University Road - Phil crawled
    through the tunnels along with Jerry, John Dixon
    and myself......since discovered in the tunnels -
    blue asbestos and rat droppings!!!!

34
Lucky escape
  • I recall vividly what can only be described as a
    Phils near death experience.
  • Phil left his office in the old building to see
    me - when he returned his book shelves had fallen
    down on top of his desk - too many files on his
    shelves ....he loved paper and colour coded A4
    ring binders!

Tim Hadwin
35
Must have been a toast to you, Phil but would
you recognise them now?
36
Attention to detail
from Martin Clarke, University of Leeds
  • I first met Phil in 1975 as a final year
    undergraduate when we were fortunate enough to
    have option courses (not modules) such as Urban
    and Regional Modelling and Planning.
  • I did my project on generating a factorial
    ecology of Leeds, using SPSS and the card punch
    machine in the computing department. It took a
    while to get all the cards in order but proved to
    be a good project, a forerunner of the
    geodemographic classification systems that
    emerged in the 1980s.
  • Shortly after I graduated I was hitch-hiking to
    a party in the Lake District and Phil and son
    Gareth gave me a lift to Ilkley. When Gareth
    asked what his dad was doing he said he was
    dropping me off at the edge of town. Gareth
    pointed out that the edge of town was a continuum
    and not a specific place. He obviously inherited
    his fathers attention to detail! ..

37
  • . I have admired Phils attention to detail
    ever since and have appreciated his friendship as
    a colleague for 33 years. His contribution to
    population geography both in the UK and
    internationally has been immense.
  • Like many academics of his type I am sure he
    will never retire but will continue to use his
    wisdom in pushing forward our understanding of
    population change and dynamics.

Martin Clarke
38
From Louise Mackay
39
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40
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41
  • Hello Phil 
  • Sorry I can't be there. I'm sure that today has
    celebrated your many academic successes. 
  • But let's not forget what a great teacher and
    mentor you are - with your endless encouragement
    and enthusiasm. 
  • It's been a privilege to have learnt from you
    and worked with you.  I hope you have a long and
    fun filled retirement. 
  • Best wishes,
  • Louise

Louise Mackay
42
Major influence
from John Stillwell, University of Leeds
  • I was a joint honours student (Geog/Econ) in my
    second year at Leeds when I first encountered
    Phil newly arrived from Chicago and with
    part-American accent teaching a course on
    Migration and Regional Development.
  • No coincidence that, over 30 years later, I was
    appointed to a Chair in Migration and Regional
    Development!
  • I owe much of this transition to Phil.
  • I have been very lucky to have benefited from
    Phils careful supervision, wise council,
    meticulous attention to detail, research
    leadership, honesty, loyalty, friendship and
    continuing support. Many thanks, Phil!

43
Serious supervision
from Frank Cudjoe, University of Leeds
  • Several years ago I decided to undertake a MPhil
    on The Nature of Organic Farming in Britain.
    Once the proposal was accepted, I discovered that
    my supervisors were Richard Smith (agricultural
    systems) and Phil Rees (computing and everything
    else). I think the split was 25/75 but ended up
    more like 15/85.
  • The first meeting with Richard was a breeze a
    reading list, access to his box of his research
    material and pointers to releveant journals. This
    was the way research should be enough time for
    beers, sports, music and time for visits to the
    Eldon and Faversham.
  • My meeting with Phil was totally different to
    that with Richard. The first thing Phil did was
    to get a notepad and started making notes. By the
    end of the meeting I had the thesis structured
    layout, diagrams showing how everything linked
    together, suggested reading materials and a point
    or two to ponder for the next meeting. Life on
    easy street was over! ..

44
Frank Cudjoe continues
  • By the time I had my RSG, I had written two
    and a half chapters and designed a questionnaire
    survey. Phil then suggested I did a sample
    testing by sending copies to the organic farming
    organisations, and finding a farmer from each
    branch for their views on the structure and
    content.
  • It was at this stage Phil pulled a rabbit (the
    size of Harvey) out of the hat. It just happened
    that Phil had a friend from his time at
    university who had a small organic holding. In a
    short time Frankie was driving over the country
    visiting farms.
  • With the questionnaires sent, Phil suggested I
    might find the following book of interest Soul
    of the machine by Tracy Kidder. On reading the
    first few pages I thought Phil had lost it as the
    book was about Data General and other firms in
    the computing industry and the design and
    development of micro-computers, I finished it in
    ten days and got to work. It was about tackling a
    subject from the opposite direction from the
    experts.

45
  • .. The effects of having Phil as a
    supervisor became apparent some years later.
    While demonstrating computer packages or helping
    with dissertations I found myself saying phrases
    like you need to do some housekeeping on these
    files or after youve checked your data, get a
    fresh pair of eyes to look at it, then check
    them again.
  • On one occasion, while I was helping an
    undergrad with his dissertation, a postgrad who
    had been standing close-by asked if Phil Rees
    was my supervisor. When I asked why he pointed
    out that the first thing I did was to reach for
    my note pad and started making notes on things to
    do and reference sources.
  • Finally, thanks Phil for getting the powers that
    be to install some proper ramps for making the
    Baines Wing and West Teaching Labs accessible.

Frank Cudjoe
46
From Nicole van de Gaag, NIDI
47
  • Dear Phil,
  • During your visit at NIDI in the mid 1990s I
    learned from you to enjoy the study of regional
    demography.
  • Since then there were several occasions where we
    worked together, and I am very happy that we will
    continue to do so within the DEMIFER project.
  • Thank you for everything!
  • Happy retirement!
  • Nicole van der Gaag

48
From admissions tutor to PhD supervisor
from Alex Hirschfield, Applied Criminology
Centre, University of Huddersfield
  • I owe a lot to Phil Rees. I first met him in
    August 1974 when I came up to Leeds for an
    interview. I was just 20 and Phil must have been
    29 or 30. He had a large picture on his wall of
    an American astronaut doing a space walk - years
    before we knew anything about Piers Sellers!
  • I wanted to transfer to Leeds because I was
    unhappy at my first University where I had a
    pretty awful first year. Phil gave me a second
    chance by admitting me to Leeds to read
    geography.
  • I stayed for 10 years completed my B.A. and
    went on to do a PhD under Phil's supervision.
    Throughout the process Phil was always there for
    me - even agreeing to see me at weekends to
    ensure that I submitted. I ended up writing the
    largest PhD thesis in the history of the School
    which I am sure Phil has never forgotten - nor
    the external examiner who had to carry it all
    the way from Swansea ! Phil got me through and I
    will always be grateful to him.
  • I have tremendous respect for Phil as a teacher,
    mentor and outstanding scholar and I wish him
    nothing but happiness and fulfilment in his
    retirement.

49
Head of School 2001-2004 Phew, nearly over!
Summer 2004
50
Shared Passions
Phil and Laura at the RHS gardens at Harlow Carr,
July 2008
51
Honours
  • Royal Geographical Society
  • Gill Memorial Award
  • 1998 Fellow of the British Academy
  • 2004 Commander of the British Empire
  • 2009 Royal Geographical Society with IBG
    Victoria Medal for research in
    population geography and
    demography
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