The Beesley Lectures

Time:

  • 12/11/2009
    18:30
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The Beesley Lectures are a series of eight annual lectures covering the regulated industries in the UK. Now in their nineteenth year, the lectures are held in memory of Professor Michael Beesley, who founded the series in 1991 and organized them until his death in 1999. He was a leading architect of the British system of utility regulation and a Managing Trustee of the Institute of Economic Affairs.




Each evening will begin at the Institute of Directors at 6.30pm. Delegates are encouraged to network over refreshments until 7pm, when the lecture will commence. An industry-leading speaker will give a one hour lecture and a specialist will give a short response before handing over to the audience for further discussion. Each lecture will end at 8.45pm with refreshments.




Lecture One


Thursday 24th September 2009:


‘What is the role of Public Service Broadcasting in the digital age?’




Lecture Two


Thursday 1st October 2009:


‘Promoting innovation in the electricity industry’




Lecture Three


Thursday 8th October 2009:


‘Competition and innovation in the water industry’




Lecture Four


Thursday 15th October 2009:


‘The significance of economic evidence in competition cases’




Lecture Five


Thursday 22nd October 2009:


‘Financial markets and financeability: recent developments for utility regulation’




Lecture Six


Thursday 29th October 2009:


‘A nuclear future? UK government policy and the role of the market’




Lecture Seven


Thursday 5th November 2009:


‘The development of competition in the UK airport market’




Lecture Eight


Thursday 12th November 2009:


‘Regulating banking as a utility’