Difference between revisions of "Noel Malcolm"
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Revision as of 11:42, 7 October 2008
Noel Robert Malcolm (born December 26 1956) is a neoconservative English writer, historian and journalist.
Malcolm was educated at Eton College, Peterhouse, Cambridge, Trinity College, Cambridge, has a doctorate from the University of Cambridge, and was for a time Fellow of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge.
He is a former Foreign Editor of The Spectator, and columnist for the Daily Telegraph. He gave up journalism in 1995 to become a full time writer, becoming in 2002 a Senior Research Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford. He is a Fellow of the British Academy.
His name appears among the founders of the now controversial British Helsinki Human Rights Group on behalf of which he had spoken[1] as recently as 1999. He now chairs the Board of Trustees at the Bosnian Institute.[2]
Contents
Affiliations
- Centre for Policy Studies
- Friends of the Union
- Standpoint.Online – Advisory Board
Connections
Publications
Books
Noel Malcolm is the author of Bosnia: A Short History (1994), Origins of English Nonsense (1997), Kosovo: A Short History (1998), Aspects of Hobbes (2002), and (with J. Stedall) John Pell (1611-1685) and His Correspondence with Sir Charles Cavendish: The Mental World of an Early Modern Mathematician (2005). He is the editor of The Correspondence of Thomas Hobbes (1994). He has also written George Enescu: His Life and Music (1990) (Toccata Press). He also wrote a pamphlet in 1991 titled Sense on Sovereignty, a discussion of the arguments about Britain's membership of the European Union published by the Centre for Policy Studies.
Articles by Noel Malcolm on Yugoslavia available online
- "Kosova është territor i humbur për Serbinë", Intervistoi Iliriana A. Bajo, Radio Evropa e Lirë, 3. Dhjetor, 2003.
- "Nato must remain until the job is done", The Daily Telegraph, 2 September 2001.
- "Milosevic was doomed by press freedom", The Sunday Telegraph, 1 July 2001.
- "Why we were right to bomb Kosovo", The Daily Telegraph, 24 March 2000.
- "Independence for Kosovo", The New York Times, 9 June 1999.
- "Kosovo, Serbian Nationalism and Territorial Partition", HABSBURG Reviews, 10 May 1999.
- "Response to Amos Perlmutter's op-ed "Who Will Run Kosovo", The Washington Times, 4 May 1999.
- "What Ancient Hatreds?", Foreign Affairs, January/February 1999.
- "Kosovo: Only Independence Will Work", The National Interest, Winter 1998/99.
- "Kicking Kenney on Kosovo", The Nation, 16 November 1998, Volume 267, Number 16.
- "Kosovo's History", New York Review of Books, 16 July 1998.
- "Kosovo and Bosnia: three points", Bosnian report, March-May 1998, New Series no.3.
- "The Past Must Not Be Prologue", Time, 30 March 1998, Vol. 151 N° 13.
- "The grandee and a question of genocide", Daily Mail, 6 November 1996.
- "Appease with Dishonor: Faulty History", Foreign Affairs, November/December 1995.
Reviews of books on Yugoslavia by Noel Malcolm
- "Britain's fatal foreign policy", Review of the book by Brendan Simms: Unfinest Hour: 'Britain and the Destruction of Bosnia (Allen Lane/Penguin), Bosnian Report, January - May 2002, New Series No 27-28.
- "The dysfunctional functionary", The Sunday Telegraph, 20 October 2000.
- "Stay the Hand of Vengeance", Review of: Stay the Hand of Vengeance: the politics of war crimes tribunals, by Gary Bass, Princeton University Press, The Sunday Telegraph, 15 October 2000.
- "Fighting For Peace: Bosnia 1994", Review of the book by General Sir Michael Rose, Harvill, London, Bosnian Institute, 1998.
- "Norman Cigar's Genocide in Bosnia: the policy of ethnic cleansing", The Sunday Telegraph, 11 June 1995.
- "David Owen and his Balkan bungling", extended version of a review of Lord Owen's "Balkan Odyssey" (London 1995, New York 1996), first published in The Sunday Telegraph on 12 November 1995.