Difference between revisions of "Max Beloff Centre for the Study of Liberty"

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The [[Max Beloff Centre for the Study of Liberty]] is a think tank operating from the [[University of Buckingham]]. It was created in January 2005 in memory of [[Max Beloff]], the founder of the [[University of Buckingham]]. The rationale behind the think tank is that:
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In 2002, the [[University of Buckingham]] took initial steps to start up a new think-tank, the Max Beloff Centre for the Study of Liberty, for which it recruited several new members of staff - most notably [[Roger Scruton]], [[Anthony O'Hear]], [[Dennis O'Keeffe]], and [[Chris Woodhead]]<ref>News, [http://www.buckingham.ac.uk/news/newsarchive/philosophers.html BUCKINGHAM WELCOMES ROGER SCRUTON AND ANTHONY O'HEAR], ''University of Buckingham'', 17-September-2002, Accessed via Internet Archive 11-January-2003 on 01-September-2010</ref><ref>Guardian.co.uk, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2002/sep/16/highereducation.uk1 The Third Degree], ''The Guardian'', 16-September-2002, Accessed 01-September-2010</ref>.
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The centre was created in January 2005, in memory of [[Max Beloff]], 'in order to 'create a countervailing institution that will reinforce the value of liberty'<ref name="Buck"/>. The rationale behind the think tank is that:
  
 
:'Liberty has underpinned the Judeo-Christian ideal for millennia, and it was the idea of liberty that moulded Europe. Britain, too, was forged by liberty, and British leadership in commerce and politics flowed out of the Glorious Revolution of 1688 which established the Bill of Rights and the rule of law'
 
:'Liberty has underpinned the Judeo-Christian ideal for millennia, and it was the idea of liberty that moulded Europe. Britain, too, was forged by liberty, and British leadership in commerce and politics flowed out of the Glorious Revolution of 1688 which established the Bill of Rights and the rule of law'
  
:'liberty is constantly under threat from governments and their apologists who seek to over-tax and over-regulate'.<ref name="Buck">The Max Beloff Centre for the Study of Liberty, [http://www.buckingham.ac.uk/international/aboutdept/beloff/ The Max Beloff Centre for the Study of Liberty], ''University of Buckingham'', Accessed 02-September-2010</ref>  
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According to the centre, the perceived threat to 'liberty' comes from 'governments and their apologists who seek to over-tax and over-regulate'.<ref name="Buck">The Max Beloff Centre for the Study of Liberty, [http://www.buckingham.ac.uk/international/aboutdept/beloff/ The Max Beloff Centre for the Study of Liberty], ''University of Buckingham'', Accessed 02-September-2010</ref>  
  
The centre has therefore been created in order to 'create a countervailing institution that will reinforce the value of liberty'<ref name="Buck"/>
 
  
 
==2009 Conference: Classical Liberalism in the 21st century: A Symposium in the honour of Norman P Barry==
 
==2009 Conference: Classical Liberalism in the 21st century: A Symposium in the honour of Norman P Barry==
  
In March 2009 a conference was held at the Max Beloff Centre entitled 'Classical Liberalism in the 21st century: A Symposium in the honour of Norman P Barry'. The aim of the conference was 'to consider the sustainability of the classical liberal position in the early 21st century and to discuss the contribution of the late Professor [[Norman Barry]]'s life and work to the defence of this position.<ref>In Honour of Norman Barry, [http://accessible.iea.org.uk/record.jsp?type=news&ID=473 Conference at Buckingham University to celebrate the work of Norman Barry], ''Institute of Economic Affairs'', 30-January-2009, Accessed 03-September-2010</ref>
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In March 2009 a conference was held at the Max Beloff Centre entitled 'Classical Liberalism in the 21st century: A Symposium in the honour of Norman P Barry'. The aim of the conference was 'to consider the sustainability of the classical liberal position in the early 21st century and to discuss the contribution of the late Professor [[Norman Barry]]'s life and work to the defence of this position.<ref>In Honour of Norman Barry, [http://accessible.iea.org.uk/record.jsp?type=news&ID=473 Conference at Buckingham University to celebrate the work of Norman Barry], ''Institute of Economic Affairs'', 30-January-2009, Accessed 03-September-2010</ref> Barry had been Professor of Social and Political Theory at the University since 1984. 'Originally planned for his retirement, the symposium became a fitting commemoration for him following his death in October 2008.
 
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Barry had been Professor of Social and Political Theory at the University since 1984. 'Originally planned for his retirement, the symposium became a fitting commemoration for him following his death in October 2008.  
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The papers from the conference were published in a book edited by [[Michael James]] and published by the [[University of Buckingham Press]] in 2010.<ref>Michael James [http://www.amazon.co.uk/Classical-Liberalism-21st-Century-Essays/dp/0956071643 Classical Liberalism in the 21st Century: Essays in Honour of Norman Barry], ''Amazon.co.uk'', accessed 3 September 2010</ref> Contributors included [[Michael James]], [[Norman Barry]], [[Stephen Davies]], [[Mustafa Erdogan]], [[David Henderson]], [[Terence Kealey]], [[Julian Morris]], [[Alan Peacock]], [[Mark Pennington]], [[Martin Ricketts]], [[Colin Robinson]], [[Charles Rowley]], [[Nathanael Smith]], [[Elaine Sternberg]].
 
 
Norman P. Barry 1844 to 2008 was Professor of Social and Political Theory at the University of Buckingham. He played a significant part in the revival of classical liberal ideas in Britain since the 1970s. A political theorist by training, he was well-equipped to explore and expound the origins of the classical liberal tradition in the 17th and 18th centuries, as well as the philosophical foundations of the modern classical liberal agenda of limited government, the rule of law and free markets. His earlier publications include Hayek s Social and Economic Philosophy 1979, On Classical Liberalism and Libertarianism 1986 and The New Right 1987. In the later years his focus on applying classical liberal principles to a range of public policy issues resulted in a number of publications including Welfare 1990 and Business Ethics 1998. As a political theorist engaging with economics, he was an effective expositor of the Austrian School of economics and of the public choice analysis of government. His An Introduction to Modern Political Theory, first published in 1981, appeared in its fourth edition in 2000. Norman Barry was a lucid and engaging writer and teacher who used his talent for wit and irony to good effect in communicating often difficult or dry ideas to a wide and appreciative audience.
 
About the Author
 
Michael James is a Visiting Fellow at the Max Beloff Centre for the Study of Liberty at the University of Buckingham. He has been a full-time editor since 1989, after a 20 year career as a lecturer in politics at universities in the UK and Australia. From 1994 to 1998 he was the founding editor of Agenda, the policy journal of the Australian National Universitys College of Business and Economics.
 
 
 
The papers from the conference were published in a book edited by [[Michael James]] and published by the [[University of Buckingham Press] in 2010.<ref name="Amaz">Micheal James [ http://www.amazon.co.uk/Classical-Liberalism-21st-Century-Essays/dp/0956071643 Classical Liberalism in the 21st Century: Essays in Honour of Norman Barry], Amazon.co.uk, accessed 3 September 2010</ref> Contributors included [[Norman Barry]], [[Stephen Davies]], [[Mustafa Erdogan]], [[David Henderson]], [[Terence Kealey]], [[Julian Morris]], [[Alan Peacock]], [[Mark Pennington]], [[Martin Ricketts]], [[Colin Robinson]], [[Charles Rowley]], [[Nathanael Smith]], [[Elaine Sternberg]].<ref name="Amaz">
 
  
 
==People==
 
==People==
  
[[Graham Dawson]], Visiting Fellow<ref>[http://www.qfinance.com/contributor-biographies/graham-dawson Graham Dawson, CONTRIBUTOR BIOGRAPHIES], ''QFinance'', Accessed 03-September-2010</ref> | [[Micheal James]]<ref name="Amaz"/> |
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[[Graham Dawson]], Visiting Fellow<ref>[http://www.qfinance.com/contributor-biographies/graham-dawson Graham Dawson, CONTRIBUTOR BIOGRAPHIES], ''QFinance'', Accessed 03-September-2010</ref> | [[Michael James]]<ref>Michael James [http://www.amazon.co.uk/Classical-Liberalism-21st-Century-Essays/dp/0956071643 Classical Liberalism in the 21st Century: Essays in Honour of Norman Barry], ''Amazon.co.uk'', accessed 3 September 2010</ref>
  
 
==Affiliations==
 
==Affiliations==

Latest revision as of 15:06, 6 September 2010

In 2002, the University of Buckingham took initial steps to start up a new think-tank, the Max Beloff Centre for the Study of Liberty, for which it recruited several new members of staff - most notably Roger Scruton, Anthony O'Hear, Dennis O'Keeffe, and Chris Woodhead[1][2].

The centre was created in January 2005, in memory of Max Beloff, 'in order to 'create a countervailing institution that will reinforce the value of liberty'[3]. The rationale behind the think tank is that:

'Liberty has underpinned the Judeo-Christian ideal for millennia, and it was the idea of liberty that moulded Europe. Britain, too, was forged by liberty, and British leadership in commerce and politics flowed out of the Glorious Revolution of 1688 which established the Bill of Rights and the rule of law'

According to the centre, the perceived threat to 'liberty' comes from 'governments and their apologists who seek to over-tax and over-regulate'.[3]


2009 Conference: Classical Liberalism in the 21st century: A Symposium in the honour of Norman P Barry

In March 2009 a conference was held at the Max Beloff Centre entitled 'Classical Liberalism in the 21st century: A Symposium in the honour of Norman P Barry'. The aim of the conference was 'to consider the sustainability of the classical liberal position in the early 21st century and to discuss the contribution of the late Professor Norman Barry's life and work to the defence of this position.[4] Barry had been Professor of Social and Political Theory at the University since 1984. 'Originally planned for his retirement, the symposium became a fitting commemoration for him following his death in October 2008.

The papers from the conference were published in a book edited by Michael James and published by the University of Buckingham Press in 2010.[5] Contributors included Michael James, Norman Barry, Stephen Davies, Mustafa Erdogan, David Henderson, Terence Kealey, Julian Morris, Alan Peacock, Mark Pennington, Martin Ricketts, Colin Robinson, Charles Rowley, Nathanael Smith, Elaine Sternberg.

People

Graham Dawson, Visiting Fellow[6] | Michael James[7]

Affiliations

University of Buckingham

Notes

  1. News, BUCKINGHAM WELCOMES ROGER SCRUTON AND ANTHONY O'HEAR, University of Buckingham, 17-September-2002, Accessed via Internet Archive 11-January-2003 on 01-September-2010
  2. Guardian.co.uk, The Third Degree, The Guardian, 16-September-2002, Accessed 01-September-2010
  3. 3.0 3.1 The Max Beloff Centre for the Study of Liberty, The Max Beloff Centre for the Study of Liberty, University of Buckingham, Accessed 02-September-2010
  4. In Honour of Norman Barry, Conference at Buckingham University to celebrate the work of Norman Barry, Institute of Economic Affairs, 30-January-2009, Accessed 03-September-2010
  5. Michael James Classical Liberalism in the 21st Century: Essays in Honour of Norman Barry, Amazon.co.uk, accessed 3 September 2010
  6. Graham Dawson, CONTRIBUTOR BIOGRAPHIES, QFinance, Accessed 03-September-2010
  7. Michael James Classical Liberalism in the 21st Century: Essays in Honour of Norman Barry, Amazon.co.uk, accessed 3 September 2010