Difference between revisions of "Alan Hudson"
m (→Publications: spacing) |
|||
(16 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Powerbase:LM network: Resources}} | {{Powerbase:LM network: Resources}} | ||
− | [[Alan Hudson]] (Date of Birth: 04/01/1951) is an academic and is associated with the libertarian anti-environmental [[LM network]]. He was a director of the [[RCP]] publications company [[Junius Publications]] from | + | [[File:Alan_Hudson.jpg|150px|thumb|left|Alan Hudson]] |
+ | [[Alan Hudson]] (Date of Birth: 04/01/1951) is an academic and is associated with the libertarian anti-environmental [[LM network]]. He was a director of the [[RCP]] publications company [[Junius Publications]] from August 1990 until it was wound up in 2000,<ref>Source: Companies House, Accessed 8 January 2011</ref> though he only wrote for ''[[LM]]'' under his own name in December 1999/January 2000 just before it closed,<ref>[[Alan Hudson]], [http://web.archive.org/web/20010628030111/http://web.archive.org/web/20010628030111/www.informinc.co.uk/LM/LM126/LM126_Hudson.html 'List mania'], ''LM'' 126, p. 13, December/January 1999. </ref> and wrote an introduction for a book published by Junius for [[Living Marxism]] in 1995.<ref>Frederick Engels ''Socialism: Utopian and Scientific'', with an introduction by [[Alan Hudson]] London: Junius, 1995. . P/b, 8.5" x 5.", 73pp. 'Living Marxism Originals'.</ref> The only other 'Alan' that wrote for ''[[Living Marxism]]'' before 1995 was [[Alan Harding]] who wrote mainly on Europe, sport and culture/the arts. Hudson also wrote on culture in 1995/6. Given this and the practice of using pseudonymous surnames, often starting with the same letter as the real name, it is possible that Harding was Hudson's nom de guerre in the RCP. | ||
+ | |||
+ | He has spoken at the [[Battle of Ideas]], <ref>"[http://www.battleofideas.org.uk/index.php/2010/speaker_detail/355/ Speaker details]", Battle of Ideas website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref> | ||
an [[Institute of Ideas]] event, <ref>[http://www.instituteofideas.com/transcripts/education2004.pdf IoI Education Conference], Institute of Ideas website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref> | an [[Institute of Ideas]] event, <ref>[http://www.instituteofideas.com/transcripts/education2004.pdf IoI Education Conference], Institute of Ideas website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref> | ||
the Manchester and Leeds [[Salons]] <ref>[http://www.manchestersalon.org.uk/speakers.html Speakers], Manchester Salon website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref> <ref>"[http://www.birminghamsalon.org/previous.html Previous events]", Birmingham Salon website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref> and for [[WORLDwrite]]. <ref>"[http://www.worldwrite.org.uk/londonbehindthescenes/trainerbios.html Trainer Bios]", WORLDwrite website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref> He has written for [[Culture Wars]], [[Channel Cyberia]] <ref>[http://www.conted.ox.ac.uk/research/profiles/profile.php?id=83 Young Persons Guide to History], University of Oxford website, accessed 28 November 2010</ref> and [[Spiked]], <ref>"[http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php/site/article/2262/ Citius, altius, fortius]", Spiked website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref> co-wrote a book with [[Dennis Hayes]] <ref>"[http://www.thefreesociety.org/Articles/Features/the-debate-deficit-how-the-2010-election-has-failed-the-electorate The Debate Deficit]", Free Society website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref> and contributed to a book for [[Audacity]]. <ref>"[http://www.audacity.org/Sustaining%20Architecture%20in%20the%20Anti-Machine%20Age%20contents.htm Sustaining Architecture in the Anti-Machine Age]", Audacity website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref>. He was one of the first fifty signatories to the statement by the [[Academics for Academic Freedom]]. <ref>[http://afaf.web.officelive.com/first100.aspx Signatories 1-100 About Us], AFAF website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref> | the Manchester and Leeds [[Salons]] <ref>[http://www.manchestersalon.org.uk/speakers.html Speakers], Manchester Salon website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref> <ref>"[http://www.birminghamsalon.org/previous.html Previous events]", Birmingham Salon website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref> and for [[WORLDwrite]]. <ref>"[http://www.worldwrite.org.uk/londonbehindthescenes/trainerbios.html Trainer Bios]", WORLDwrite website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref> He has written for [[Culture Wars]], [[Channel Cyberia]] <ref>[http://www.conted.ox.ac.uk/research/profiles/profile.php?id=83 Young Persons Guide to History], University of Oxford website, accessed 28 November 2010</ref> and [[Spiked]], <ref>"[http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php/site/article/2262/ Citius, altius, fortius]", Spiked website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref> co-wrote a book with [[Dennis Hayes]] <ref>"[http://www.thefreesociety.org/Articles/Features/the-debate-deficit-how-the-2010-election-has-failed-the-electorate The Debate Deficit]", Free Society website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref> and contributed to a book for [[Audacity]]. <ref>"[http://www.audacity.org/Sustaining%20Architecture%20in%20the%20Anti-Machine%20Age%20contents.htm Sustaining Architecture in the Anti-Machine Age]", Audacity website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref>. He was one of the first fifty signatories to the statement by the [[Academics for Academic Freedom]]. <ref>[http://afaf.web.officelive.com/first100.aspx Signatories 1-100 About Us], AFAF website, accessed 4 November 2010</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
==Career== | ==Career== | ||
Line 18: | Line 25: | ||
:Remember Basildon man? Or his close neighbour, Essex man? Back in the late eighties and early nineties, these stereotypical figures were invoked whenever politicians or editorial writers wanted a shorthand way of representing the new face of the British working class. These shell-suited, vulgar, 'loadsamoney' characters were said to have forsaken their traditional allegiance to the cloth cap Labour party and to have found a new home in a Conservative party only too happy to champion individuality and self-betterment. They were hardly an admired cross-section of the population, but the notion that they were a new political entity was a powerful impetus to the creation of New Labour and the 'third way'. But sociologists Dennis Hayes and Alan Hudson were able to raise serious doubts about Basildon man's reality. In a 1992 survey, the year Basildon re -elected its Conservative MP, they found little of the brash aggressive materialism they had been led to expect.<ref name="Taylor">Laurie Taylor 'Off cuts' The Guardian (London) May 24, 2000 Guardian Society Pages; Pg. 9</ref> | :Remember Basildon man? Or his close neighbour, Essex man? Back in the late eighties and early nineties, these stereotypical figures were invoked whenever politicians or editorial writers wanted a shorthand way of representing the new face of the British working class. These shell-suited, vulgar, 'loadsamoney' characters were said to have forsaken their traditional allegiance to the cloth cap Labour party and to have found a new home in a Conservative party only too happy to champion individuality and self-betterment. They were hardly an admired cross-section of the population, but the notion that they were a new political entity was a powerful impetus to the creation of New Labour and the 'third way'. But sociologists Dennis Hayes and Alan Hudson were able to raise serious doubts about Basildon man's reality. In a 1992 survey, the year Basildon re -elected its Conservative MP, they found little of the brash aggressive materialism they had been led to expect.<ref name="Taylor">Laurie Taylor 'Off cuts' The Guardian (London) May 24, 2000 Guardian Society Pages; Pg. 9</ref> | ||
− | Hayes and Hudson then produced a second study with data collected in 1997. | + | Hayes and Hudson then produced a second study with data collected in 1997. The study was published as a research report and by the New Labour think tank [[Demos]]: |
:Hayes and Hudson were sufficiently fascinated by the working class attitudes they unearthed to undertake a second, more extensive survey of the town in 1997. In their new book based on this work, ''The Mood of the Nation: Basildon Man Revisited'' (Demos), they provide further evidence for their original argument that Basildon Thatcherism was only skin deep.<ref name="Taylor"/> | :Hayes and Hudson were sufficiently fascinated by the working class attitudes they unearthed to undertake a second, more extensive survey of the town in 1997. In their new book based on this work, ''The Mood of the Nation: Basildon Man Revisited'' (Demos), they provide further evidence for their original argument that Basildon Thatcherism was only skin deep.<ref name="Taylor"/> | ||
==Publications== | ==Publications== | ||
+ | *Frederick Engels ''Socialism: Utopian and Scientific'', with an introduction by [[Alan Hudson]], London: [[Junius Publications]], 1995. | ||
*[[Alan Hudson]], [[Dennis Hayes]] and [[Toby Andrew]], 1996, ''Working Lives in the 1990s: Preliminary findings of the Attitudes to Work Survey'', London: [[Global Futures]]. ISBN 101901051005<ref>Chris Barrie, 'BRITONS STRESSED FROM OVERWORK', ''The Guardian'' (London) August 21, 1996, THE GUARDIAN CITY PAGE; Pg. 16 </ref> | *[[Alan Hudson]], [[Dennis Hayes]] and [[Toby Andrew]], 1996, ''Working Lives in the 1990s: Preliminary findings of the Attitudes to Work Survey'', London: [[Global Futures]]. ISBN 101901051005<ref>Chris Barrie, 'BRITONS STRESSED FROM OVERWORK', ''The Guardian'' (London) August 21, 1996, THE GUARDIAN CITY PAGE; Pg. 16 </ref> | ||
− | * | + | *[[Alan Hudson]], [http://web.archive.org/web/20010628030111/www.informinc.co.uk/LM/LM126/LM126_Hudson.html 'List mania'], ''LM 126'', p. 13, December 1999/January 2000. |
+ | *[[Alan Hudson]], [http://web.archive.org/web/20010628030111/www.informinc.co.uk/LM/LM126/LM126_CW_Hudson.html 'Renaissance, man'], ''LM 126'', p. 34, December 1999/January 2000. | ||
*[[Dennis Hayes]] & [[Alan Hudson]], ''Who are the C2s? A Social and Political Attitudes Survey, Basildon 1992: Basildon Revisited - Change and Continuity'', Education and Work Research Group, 2001 <ref>This is an updated version of [[Frank Furedi]]'s and [[Joan Hoey]]'s 1992 study: [[Frank Furedi]] and [[Joan Hoey]] ''Who are the C2s? A Social and Political Attitudes Survey. Basildon, 1992''. Research report, 1992. It was reported in Alan Rusbridger, ESSEX CLEARS THE WAY FOR LANGDON HILLS MAN; News from BasildonThe Guardian (London) December 5, 1992, THE GUARDIAN FEATURES PAGE; Pg. 25</ref> | *[[Dennis Hayes]] & [[Alan Hudson]], ''Who are the C2s? A Social and Political Attitudes Survey, Basildon 1992: Basildon Revisited - Change and Continuity'', Education and Work Research Group, 2001 <ref>This is an updated version of [[Frank Furedi]]'s and [[Joan Hoey]]'s 1992 study: [[Frank Furedi]] and [[Joan Hoey]] ''Who are the C2s? A Social and Political Attitudes Survey. Basildon, 1992''. Research report, 1992. It was reported in Alan Rusbridger, ESSEX CLEARS THE WAY FOR LANGDON HILLS MAN; News from BasildonThe Guardian (London) December 5, 1992, THE GUARDIAN FEATURES PAGE; Pg. 25</ref> | ||
*[[Dennis Hayes]] and [[Alan Hudson]] [http://web.archive.org/web/20040301193005/http://www.demos.co.uk/basildon_pdf_media_public.aspx Basildon: The Mood of the Nation], London: Demos, 2001 | *[[Dennis Hayes]] and [[Alan Hudson]] [http://web.archive.org/web/20040301193005/http://www.demos.co.uk/basildon_pdf_media_public.aspx Basildon: The Mood of the Nation], London: Demos, 2001 | ||
*[[Dennis Hayes]] & [[Alan Hudson]], ''The Mood of the Nation: Basildon Man Revisited'', Demos, 2000 | *[[Dennis Hayes]] & [[Alan Hudson]], ''The Mood of the Nation: Basildon Man Revisited'', Demos, 2000 | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Affilations== | ||
+ | *[[Junius Publications]] DIRECTOR Appointed: pre 02/04/1992, company dissolved 25 January 2000.<ref>Source: Companies House, Accessed 8 January 2011</ref> | [[Global Futures]], wrote a report for them in 1996<ref>[[Alan Hudson]] ''Working Lives in the 1990s'', London: [[Global Futures]], 1996. Source:Chris Barrie, 'BRITONS STRESSED FROM OVERWORK', ''The Guardian'' (London) August 21, 1996, THE GUARDIAN CITY PAGE; Pg. 16 </ref> | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== |
Latest revision as of 15:48, 28 October 2017
LM network resources
|
Alan Hudson (Date of Birth: 04/01/1951) is an academic and is associated with the libertarian anti-environmental LM network. He was a director of the RCP publications company Junius Publications from August 1990 until it was wound up in 2000,[1] though he only wrote for LM under his own name in December 1999/January 2000 just before it closed,[2] and wrote an introduction for a book published by Junius for Living Marxism in 1995.[3] The only other 'Alan' that wrote for Living Marxism before 1995 was Alan Harding who wrote mainly on Europe, sport and culture/the arts. Hudson also wrote on culture in 1995/6. Given this and the practice of using pseudonymous surnames, often starting with the same letter as the real name, it is possible that Harding was Hudson's nom de guerre in the RCP.
He has spoken at the Battle of Ideas, [4] an Institute of Ideas event, [5] the Manchester and Leeds Salons [6] [7] and for WORLDwrite. [8] He has written for Culture Wars, Channel Cyberia [9] and Spiked, [10] co-wrote a book with Dennis Hayes [11] and contributed to a book for Audacity. [12]. He was one of the first fifty signatories to the statement by the Academics for Academic Freedom. [13]
Career
- 1996 Education lecturer at Canterbury Christ Church College[14]
- 2000 senior lecturer in education and social theory at Canterbury Christ Church University College[15]
- 2001-2003, Director of Social and Political Science at the Oxford University Department for Continuing Education teaching courses on The Politics and Government of the United Kingdom and the European Union, Social Policy and Research Methodologies and Political Ideologies.[16]
- 2003-present Director of Oxford University’s Leadership Programmes for China. In the last five years he has been responsible for writing the curriculum training programmes in UK public policy and public administration which have been delivered to over 1000 senior Chinese public officials at municipal, provincial and national level including national ministers.[17]
Research and writing
Hudson assisted Dennis Hayes in writing an updated report on Basildon. Hayes, 'was part of the team which first investigated the phenomenon of Basildon Man after the 1992 election.'[18] At the time this was reported in the press as having been written by Frank Furedi and Joan Hoey, both leading members of the Revolutionary Communist Party.[19]
In the 2001 report Hudson and co-author Dennis Hayes studied the alleged effect of Thatcherism on the working class by focussing on the allegedly key area of Basildon:
- Remember Basildon man? Or his close neighbour, Essex man? Back in the late eighties and early nineties, these stereotypical figures were invoked whenever politicians or editorial writers wanted a shorthand way of representing the new face of the British working class. These shell-suited, vulgar, 'loadsamoney' characters were said to have forsaken their traditional allegiance to the cloth cap Labour party and to have found a new home in a Conservative party only too happy to champion individuality and self-betterment. They were hardly an admired cross-section of the population, but the notion that they were a new political entity was a powerful impetus to the creation of New Labour and the 'third way'. But sociologists Dennis Hayes and Alan Hudson were able to raise serious doubts about Basildon man's reality. In a 1992 survey, the year Basildon re -elected its Conservative MP, they found little of the brash aggressive materialism they had been led to expect.[20]
Hayes and Hudson then produced a second study with data collected in 1997. The study was published as a research report and by the New Labour think tank Demos:
- Hayes and Hudson were sufficiently fascinated by the working class attitudes they unearthed to undertake a second, more extensive survey of the town in 1997. In their new book based on this work, The Mood of the Nation: Basildon Man Revisited (Demos), they provide further evidence for their original argument that Basildon Thatcherism was only skin deep.[20]
Publications
- Frederick Engels Socialism: Utopian and Scientific, with an introduction by Alan Hudson, London: Junius Publications, 1995.
- Alan Hudson, Dennis Hayes and Toby Andrew, 1996, Working Lives in the 1990s: Preliminary findings of the Attitudes to Work Survey, London: Global Futures. ISBN 101901051005[21]
- Alan Hudson, 'List mania', LM 126, p. 13, December 1999/January 2000.
- Alan Hudson, 'Renaissance, man', LM 126, p. 34, December 1999/January 2000.
- Dennis Hayes & Alan Hudson, Who are the C2s? A Social and Political Attitudes Survey, Basildon 1992: Basildon Revisited - Change and Continuity, Education and Work Research Group, 2001 [22]
- Dennis Hayes and Alan Hudson Basildon: The Mood of the Nation, London: Demos, 2001
- Dennis Hayes & Alan Hudson, The Mood of the Nation: Basildon Man Revisited, Demos, 2000
Affilations
- Junius Publications DIRECTOR Appointed: pre 02/04/1992, company dissolved 25 January 2000.[23] | Global Futures, wrote a report for them in 1996[24]
Notes
- ↑ Source: Companies House, Accessed 8 January 2011
- ↑ Alan Hudson, 'List mania', LM 126, p. 13, December/January 1999.
- ↑ Frederick Engels Socialism: Utopian and Scientific, with an introduction by Alan Hudson London: Junius, 1995. . P/b, 8.5" x 5.", 73pp. 'Living Marxism Originals'.
- ↑ "Speaker details", Battle of Ideas website, accessed 4 November 2010
- ↑ IoI Education Conference, Institute of Ideas website, accessed 4 November 2010
- ↑ Speakers, Manchester Salon website, accessed 4 November 2010
- ↑ "Previous events", Birmingham Salon website, accessed 4 November 2010
- ↑ "Trainer Bios", WORLDwrite website, accessed 4 November 2010
- ↑ Young Persons Guide to History, University of Oxford website, accessed 28 November 2010
- ↑ "Citius, altius, fortius", Spiked website, accessed 4 November 2010
- ↑ "The Debate Deficit", Free Society website, accessed 4 November 2010
- ↑ "Sustaining Architecture in the Anti-Machine Age", Audacity website, accessed 4 November 2010
- ↑ Signatories 1-100 About Us, AFAF website, accessed 4 November 2010
- ↑ Chris Barrie, 'BRITONS STRESSED FROM OVERWORK', The Guardian (London) August 21, 1996, THE GUARDIAN CITY PAGE; Pg. 16
- ↑ 'Living the Basildon dream', Architects Journal, October 19, 2000 Thursday
- ↑ Local Government Chronicle (LGC), LGC FEATURE - LOADSA POLITICAL CLOUT March 30, 2001 Friday Policy and Politics; News
- ↑ Oxford University, china Programmes Alan Hudson, Accessed 28 February 2011
- ↑ Demos, Basildon, 2001
- ↑ Frank Furedi and Joan Hoey Who are the C2s? A Social and Political Attitudes Survey. Basildon, 1992. Research report, 1992. Reported in Alan Rusbridger, ESSEX CLEARS THE WAY FOR LANGDON HILLS MAN; News from Basildon, The Guardian (London) December 5, 1992, THE GUARDIAN FEATURES PAGE; Pg. 25
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 Laurie Taylor 'Off cuts' The Guardian (London) May 24, 2000 Guardian Society Pages; Pg. 9
- ↑ Chris Barrie, 'BRITONS STRESSED FROM OVERWORK', The Guardian (London) August 21, 1996, THE GUARDIAN CITY PAGE; Pg. 16
- ↑ This is an updated version of Frank Furedi's and Joan Hoey's 1992 study: Frank Furedi and Joan Hoey Who are the C2s? A Social and Political Attitudes Survey. Basildon, 1992. Research report, 1992. It was reported in Alan Rusbridger, ESSEX CLEARS THE WAY FOR LANGDON HILLS MAN; News from BasildonThe Guardian (London) December 5, 1992, THE GUARDIAN FEATURES PAGE; Pg. 25
- ↑ Source: Companies House, Accessed 8 January 2011
- ↑ Alan Hudson Working Lives in the 1990s, London: Global Futures, 1996. Source:Chris Barrie, 'BRITONS STRESSED FROM OVERWORK', The Guardian (London) August 21, 1996, THE GUARDIAN CITY PAGE; Pg. 16