Smith then worked as a researcher at the
Acton Society Trust, before returning to the LSE as a lecturer in social sciences and administration. At Southampton, he was the dean of social sciences from 1967 to 1970 and the deputy vice-chancellor from 1974 to 1978. He was also involved in expanding its library and special collections and was described in one obituary as the "driving force" behind the university's
Nuffield Theatre,
Turner Sims Concert Hall and
John Hansard Gallery. According to
The Guardian, Smith "played a leading role in developing the University of Southampton's social sciences faculty and was an authority on the social psychologist
Elton Mayo"; an industrial sociologist by specialism, he co-authored (with
Nancy Seear and
Pearl Jephcott)
Married Working Women in 1962, as well as a number of other monographs and articles related to his discipline. In the 1970s and 1980s, he researched the impact of computing. == Personal life ==