Franks presented the BBC
Reith Lectures in 1954. In his series of six broadcasts, titled
Britain and the Tide of World Affairs, he explored the state of postwar politics, and considered Britain's changing political relationships with the rest of the world. In 1960 he came a close second to
Harold Macmillan in the election of the
Chancellor of Oxford University. There were 1,697 votes for Macmillan, and 1,607 votes for Franks. He was the chairman of a Commission of Inquiry at the University of Oxford in 1964–65. Between 1965 and 1984 he was the Chancellor of the
University of East Anglia. Aged 77, in 1982 he conducted an
enquiry into the events leading to the
Falklands War. He was chairman of the Board of Governors, of the United Oxford Hospitals, and of the
Wellcome Trust, and of the Committee on Ministerial Affairs, of the Honours Scrutiny Committee, the President Kennedy Memorial Committee, the
Rhodes Trust and the
Rockefeller Foundation. Franks died aged 87. ==Honours==