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Patricia Hodgson


Dame Patricia Anne Hodgson, DBE (born 19 January 1947) is a broadcasting executive and competition regulator. She is the current chair of Ofcom, having succeeded Dame Colette Bowe in April 2014, and is also Chair of the School Teachers' Review Body. In 2006-12 she was Principal of Newnham College, Cambridge.

Hodgson joined the BBC as a producer and founder-member of the distance learning team for the Open University. Between 1970 and 2000 she worked in a variety of positions, moving from production onto the executive Board (see below). She served as a part-time Member of the Mergers and Monopolies Commission between 1993–99 and returned as a non-executive Member of the Competition Commission (the successor body) between 2004–11. From September 2000 to the end of 2003, Hodgson was Chief Executive of the Independent Television Commission and led the organisation into the integrated telecoms regulator, Ofcom, where she is now Deputy Chair. From 2006-12 she was Principal of Newnham College, Cambridge.

Hodgson’s non-executive roles include Director of GCapMedia plc (2004–06), member of the BBC Trust (2006–11), Chair of the Higher Education Regulation Review Group (2004–06), Member of the Higher Education Funding Council for England (2005–11), Member of The Wellcome Trust (2004–08), Member of the Committee on Standards in Public Life (2004–08) and of the Statistics Commission (2000–06). Upon leaving Newnham in 2012, she became Deputy Chair of Ofcom and Chair of the School Teachers’ Review Body.

Hodgson worked in production between 1970 and 1983 on Arts programmes for the Open University, as a producer on Tonight and briefly as presenter on the Today programme. She became Deputy Secretary of the BBC in 1983, quickly moving to become Secretary. She was subsequently Head of Policy (1987-1992) and then Director or Policy (1993-2000) a main board position. As Director of Policy & Planning, Hodgson developed the original concept for the BBC’s international commercial television channels, including BBC World, now BBC World News.


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