He was an assistant professor at
Princeton University until 1996, was twice a visiting professor at the
University of Geneva (1992 and 2006), and was Professor of Mathematics at
Imperial College London from 2002 to 2007. From 1993 to 2002 he was a Tutorial Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford, and Reader (1996) then Professor of Topology (2000) in the University of Oxford. He remains a Supernumerary Fellow of Pembroke College. In 2016, Bridson became only the second Manxman to ever be elected to the Royal Society, after
Edward Forbes. In 2020, he was elected to
Academia Europaea. With
André Haefliger, he won the 2020
Steele Prize for Mathematical Exposition for the highly influential book
Metric Spaces of Non-positive Curvature, published by Springer-Verlag in 1999.
Honours and awards Bridson was an invited lecturer at the
International Congress of Mathematicians in 2006. • 2016 Elected a
Fellow of the Royal Society. • 2014 Elected a
Fellow of the
American Mathematical Society. • 1999
Whitehead Prize • 2012
Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award • 2020 Elected Member of Academia Europaea • 2020
Steele Prize of the
American Mathematical Society == References ==