- published: 04 May 2014
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Dr. Charles Smith Brocca is Head of Curriculum and Quality in Swansea School of Education at Swansea Metropolitan University (University of Wales). Author/co-author of Economic Development (Palgrave), International Trade and Globalisation (Anforme),Revision Express Economics (Pearson-Longman) and many academic and journalistic articles in the fields of economics and business education, devolution, regional development and European integration. His research specializes in comparative politics and economics of Wales and Catalonia, education, training and employment. He has also contributed to the Encyclopedia of Business in Today's World. He often broadcasts on regional television and radio in an 'expert' role on economic and political matters.
Smith has national standing as an examiner and curriculum developer,. He is a former chief examiner with the International Baccalaureate Organisation and has undertaken teacher training in countries spanning the five continents. He has also been a consultant for the UK government's Qualifications and Curriculum Development Agency (QCDA), an adviser to the Welsh Assembly Government (member of the Wales Employment Advisory Panel) and a member of the economic council of Britain in Europe.
Jeremy Langford (born London, England, 1956), British/Israeli glass designer and sculptor known for his monumental stacked glass sculptures. His family's original name was Lelyveld, natives of the Netherlands, and Langford is related to Joseph Lelyveld, an editor of The New York Times, and to civil rights activist Rabbi Arthur Lelyveld. Jeremy Langford’s great grandfather was a royal court entertainer in the U.K. (specializing in whistling), serving the court of King Edward VII and, after whose death, opened the soap factory Sloman’s. Langford’s father, Barry Langford (b. London, England, 1926) was the BBC producer and director who created the first pop-music shows for the network and directed many, including The Tom Jones Show. He also worked with the Beatles and the Rolling Stones discovered David Bowie and briefly managed Deep Purple.
Jeremy Langford moved from Great Britain to Melbourne, Australia, when he was 13, and began dabbling in glass when he was 15. At first, he melted bottles in an old ceramic kiln, creating from the raw material his first stained glass works. At 18, he returned to the U.K. to study at The London Film School and met a traditional English glass artist who taught him glassmaking techniques; thus, he acquired the foundation for his future work. At this time he also studied naturopathic medicine and Jewish mysticism and later homeopathy.