Kenneth Calman was born on 25 December 1941 to Grace Douglas Don and Arthur McIntosh Calman.[2] He was educated at Allan Glen's School[3] and the University of Glasgow. He began medical training and took an intercalated BSc in biochemistry while studying for his MB ChB, the general medical degree. He undertook a PhD in dermatology and also received an MD with Honours in organ preservation.[4]
He was the UK Representative at the World Health Organisation and chaired its executive committee 1988/9.
In 1998, he was appointed vice-chancellor and warden of Durham University. His time as vice-chancellor saw the expansion and integration of the campus at Stockton-on-Tees, with two colleges being established there in 2001 and the campus being renamed Queen's Campus during the 2003 Golden Jubilee celebrations. A new college was also opened in 2006, Josephine Butler College. There was also a return to the teaching of medicine at Durham, with students doing their pre-clinical studies at Queen's Campus before transferring to Newcastle to complete the clinical part of their degrees. His time as vice-chancellor also saw the closure of the Department of Applied Linguistics in 2003 and Department of East Asian Studies in 2007. Professor Calman retired as Warden in 2006 and was succeeded by Professor Christopher Higgins.
Calman was a member of the Nuffield Council on Bioethics from 2000–2008.[6] He chaired its inquiry on the Ethics of research related to healthcare in developing countries[7] from 2000–2002, and was a member of the Working Party on Public health[8] from 2006–2007.
Calman was the chair of a commission established by the Scottish Parliament in March 2008 to review Scottish devolution, commonly referred to as the Calman Commission.[13] Other Commission members include former Lord AdvocateColin Boyd, former Deputy First MinisterJim Wallace, and Mona Siddiqui, Professor of Islamic Studies at the University of Glasgow. The Commission published its first interim report in December 2008,[14] and published its final report on 15 June 2009. The Commission recommended, amongst other things, that the Scottish Parliament receive greater tax-raising powers as well as control over the regulation of airguns, the administration of elections, drink-driving limits and the national speed limit.
He was President of The Boys' Brigade from 2007 until 2012, and addressed his first council meeting as president at Tulliallan Castle in September 2008.
He likes to write poetry. In 2013, he graduated MLitt at the University of Glasgow with a thesis on Scottish Literature and medicine. This was subsequently published as a book, A Doctor's Line, in 2014.
He married Ann Wilkie in 1967, and has a son and two daughters, one of whom is the comedian Susan Calman.[16] He enjoys collecting cartoons and sundials.[17]