Sarah Hainsworth


Sarah Victoria Hainsworth is Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Executive Dean of the School of Engineering and Applied Science at Aston University, a position she took up in September 2017. Previously she was Professor of Materials and Forensic Engineering, and Head of the Department of Engineering, at the University of Leicester.

Education

Hainsworth was educated at the University of Newcastle where she was awarded BEng and PhD degrees.

Career

Hainsworth came to public attention for her analysis of the wounds found on the skeleton of Richard III. This related the tool marks to possible weapons. Her work has also including engineering a safe drinking glass by examining how the design and manufacture of glasses influences the way in which they fracture. She has also done research on automotive materials, is Director of the and heads the . In 2016 she succeeded Professor Helen Atkinson as Head of the Department of Engineering at the University of Leicester. She has acted as an expert witness and actively encourages young women to take up engineering as a career. In 2017 Hainsworth joined Aston University as their Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Executive Dean of the School of Engineering and Applied Science.

Awards and Honours

Hainsworth was awarded the Institution of Mechanical Engineers Tribology Bronze Medal in 1995, the Rosenhain Medal of the Institute of Materials, Minerals, and Mining in 2008, and was nominated as one the Women's Engineering Society's Outstanding Technical Women in 2009. In 2015, she received the American Academy of Forensic Sciences Engineering Sciences Section Andrew H. Payne Jr. Special Achievement Award in recognition of her contributions to forensic engineering sciences. In 2016 she was elected to the Royal Academy of Engineering. She was awarded an OBE in the 2019 New Year Honours for services to engineering and to forensic science.