Ehsan Masood | |
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Born | (1967-08-09)9 August 1967 (age 57) |
Alma mater | Portsmouth University Birkbeck, University of London |
Children | 1 |
Scientific career | |
Institutions | Research Professional Imperial College London Nature New Scientist BBC |
Website | twitter |
Hassan Ehsan Masood (born 9 August 1967) is a British science writer, journalist and broadcaster. Between 2009 and 2017 he was the editor of Research Fortnight (part of Research Professional News), is currently bureau chief (editorials, Africa and the Middle East) atNature,[1] and has been teaching international science policy atImperial College London.[citation needed] since 2008.
Born in London, his father Hassan Masood worked in actuarial science and his mother Shamsa Masood is a writer of short fiction in Urdu.
He went to schools in New York, Karachi and London; studied applied physics atPortsmouth Polytechnic and science communication atBirkbeck, University of London.
He worked for the journalNature[2][3] as a writer on science and international development from 1995 to 1999 and again as acting chief commissioning editor in 2008/2009. He has also worked as Opinion Editor ofNew Scientist and communications director at LEAD International.[4]
Masood has also written forProspect magazine andopenDemocracy.net, as well asThe Times,The Guardian andLe Monde. He is a former director of communications of Leadership for Environment and Development[citation needed] and also advises theBritish Council on science and on cultural relations.[citation needed]
Ehsan Masood was a regular contributor to Home Planet, an environmental affairs programme onBBC Radio 4 in the UK.
In January 2015, Masood was nominated for Services to Science and Engineering at theBritish Muslim Awards.[5]
In February 2023, Masood won Inclusive Mosque Initiative's Workplace Ally of the Year Award.
His latest book isThe Great Invention: The Story of GDP and the Making and Unmaking of the Modern World, which will be published in the US on 7 June 2016 by Pegasus.
Ehsan Masood's previous book isScience and Islam: A History.[6] This tells the story of how science developed during Islam's imperial period from 800 to 1500. It is the official tie-in to a three-part documentary series on BBC Television presented byJim Al-Khalili, Professor of Physics at the University of Surrey.
His other publications include: