Professor Richard Verrall (born 1959) is Vice-President (Strategy & Planning) of City, University of London. He took up this post in 2011 [1] and was previously Head of the Department of Actuarial Science, then Associate Dean (Research, Knowledge Transfer and International) of Cass Business School, City, University of London. [1] [2] Professor Verrall joined City, University of London, as a lecturer in 1987.
He is an Associate Editor of the British Actuarial Journal, the North American Actuarial Journal [3] and Insurance: Mathematics and Economics, [4] and a member of the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) College. [5]
Professor Verrall is a Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society (1982), a Chartered Statistician (1993) and an Honorary Fellow of the Institute of Actuaries (1999). [1] [2] [6] According to the authoritative Math Reviews catalogue of the American Mathematical Society, by 2015 he had written or co-written 16 articles in mainstream Actuarial Science journals. [7]
He received an MA in Mathematics from St John's College, Cambridge, in 1981, an MSc in Statistics from University College London in 1982 and a PhD in the field of Actuarial Science from City University London in 1989. [1]
Professor Richard Verrall (born 1959) is Vice-President (Strategy & Planning) of City, University of London. He took up this post in 2011 [1] and was previously Head of the Department of Actuarial Science, then Associate Dean (Research, Knowledge Transfer and International) of Cass Business School, City, University of London. [1] [2] Professor Verrall joined City, University of London, as a lecturer in 1987.
He is an Associate Editor of the British Actuarial Journal, the North American Actuarial Journal [3] and Insurance: Mathematics and Economics, [4] and a member of the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) College. [5]
Professor Verrall is a Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society (1982), a Chartered Statistician (1993) and an Honorary Fellow of the Institute of Actuaries (1999). [1] [2] [6] According to the authoritative Math Reviews catalogue of the American Mathematical Society, by 2015 he had written or co-written 16 articles in mainstream Actuarial Science journals. [7]
He received an MA in Mathematics from St John's College, Cambridge, in 1981, an MSc in Statistics from University College London in 1982 and a PhD in the field of Actuarial Science from City University London in 1989. [1]