Eleanor Riley


Eleanor Riley was Director of the Roslin Institute, Dean of Research at the Royal School of Veterinary Studies, and professor of Immunology at the University of Edinburgh. Following alleged bullying by senior members of the college of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine which left her feeling ignored and undermined she abruptly resigned from her post as director of the Roslin Institute and took up a post at King's Buildings in February 2020. Her research focusses on understanding the immune response of the host to malaria and other diseases using human data and mouse models.

Education

Riley gained her bachelor's degree in cell biology and veterinary science from the University of Bristol, before reading for a postgraduate diploma in veterinary disease from Cornell University and studying her PhD in immunology and parasitology at the University of Liverpool. Her thesis entitled 'The immunology of experimental Echinoccus granulosus infection in mice' was accepted in 1985.

Career

Riley worked for five years at the MRC Unit The Gambia. Riley joined the University of Edinburgh initially as a research fellow in 1990, before moving to the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine in 1998 as a professor of infectious disease and immunology. She was promoted in 2001 to head of the immunology and infectious disease department, a post she held until 2013. She was elected a fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences in 2014. Riley was appointed director of the Roslin Institute in September 2017, one month before the Roslin was awarded a Gold Athena SWAN for outstanding commitments to gender equality in the workplace. She was invited to give the 2018 International Day of Women and Girls in Science Lecture at the University of St Andrews. In 2019 Riley became the first woman to be awarded the Ronald Ross Medal by LSHTM, stating that:
In February 2020 Riley resigned from her post as director of the Roslin Institute following alleged bullying by senior members of the college.