Difference between revisions of "Leonard Schapiro"
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==Biography== | ==Biography== | ||
===Early life and education=== | ===Early life and education=== | ||
− | Schapiro was born in Glasgow on 22 April 1908 to Max and Leah Schapiro. He attended the prestigous London public school St Paul’s School, and then studied University College, London. <ref> | + | Schapiro was born in Glasgow on 22 April 1908 to Max and Leah Schapiro. He attended the prestigous London public school St Paul’s School, and then studied law at University College, London. <ref>Harold Shukman, ‘Schapiro, Leonard Bertram (1908–1983)’, rev., ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', (Oxford University Press, 2004)</ref> |
===At the Bar and in intelligence=== | ===At the Bar and in intelligence=== |
Revision as of 11:32, 23 October 2008
“I have never changed my opinions about the evils of mass society, the merits and an elite…with aristocratic standards, or on the need for order above all” – Leonard Schapiro [1]
Leonard Bertram Schapiro (born 22 April 1908, Glasgow - 2 November 1983, London) was a British academic, scholar of Russian politics and right wing operative. He taught for many years at the London School of Economics, where he was Professor of Political Science with Special Reference to Russian Studies.
Born in Glasgow, he was taken back to Russia and spent his childhood in Riga and St. Petersburg, but returned to Britain with his parents in 1920 and completed his education in London.
For many years Schapiro practised as a barrister, and it was not until 1955 that he published his first book -The Origins of the Communist Autocracy - and took up his first academic appointment, at the London School of Economics.
Schapiro's most famous book was The Communist Party of the Soviet Union, first published in 1960 with a revised and expanded edition in 1970.
After his death, some of his scattered articles were collected in the volume Russian Studies (1987).
Contents
Biography
Early life and education
Schapiro was born in Glasgow on 22 April 1908 to Max and Leah Schapiro. He attended the prestigous London public school St Paul’s School, and then studied law at University College, London. [2]
At the Bar and in intelligence
Schapiro wrote in X: “the first twenty of the fifty adult years of my life were spent either in practice at the Bar, or in military intelligence” [3] He was called to the Bar in 1932 and worked on the London and Western Circuit until the outbreak of the Second World War. In 1940 he joined BBC Monitoring Service for two years before being recruited to work in intelligence for the War Office. After the war he worked for the Intelligence Division of the German Control Commn 1945–46, [4] where he says he was "involved with assettment of the Soviet Union's military strength and achievement." This he says provided him "with some kind of introduction to teh study of the Soviet Union to which, after the mid-fifties, I was to devote most of my time." [5] Schapiro returned to law until 1955, when his first book, The Origin of the Communist Autocracy, was published.
Sovietology
The Washington Times identified Schapiro as one of the four founders of Sovietology, along with Philip Moseley of Columbia, Merle Fainsod of Harvard and a non-academic, Bertram Wolfe. "Their books, monographs and articles," according to The Washington Times, "formed the basis for a continuing academic analysis of Soviet affairs." [6]
Adviser to Margaret Thatcher
In early 1980 Schapiro was invited by Margaret Thatcher to lunch at Chequers. Thatcher had been advised by the Foreign Office that the Soviet Union did not pose a serious military threat, so she invited Schapiro and other right-wing experts to take part in a committee offering 'independent' advice. Michael Howard, who was also invited, recalls the following in his memoires:
In the USA a group of hawks formed a well funded Committee on the Present Danger, consisting largely of pupils and associates of Albert Wohlstetter, who urged the breaking off of arms-control negotiations and massive rearmament. Mrs Thatcher was temperamentally inclined to agree with them. The Foreign Office was not. Not surpringly, the Prime Minister sought further options...She asked Hugh [Thomas] to set up a small committee to draft independent recommendations for the conduct of British foreign policy consisting of myself, Leonard Schapiro and Elie Kedourie. Leonard was a leading expert on the Soviet Union, Elie on the Middle East. Both were deeply pessimistic. The Soviets were on the march, thought Leonard, and as determined as ever on world conquest...They believed that the recently concluding Helsinki Accords had been a defeat for the West by 'legitimizing' the Soviet control of Eastern Europe...We put together a totally incoherent docuement which deserved to go straight into the waste paper basket and probably did. [7]
Affiliations
- Information Research Department wrote for them eg in Why Communism Must Fail[8]
- Institute for European Defence and Strategic Studies
- Institute for the Study of Conflict
Notes
- ↑ Leoard Schapiro, ‘My Fifty Years of Social Science’, Government and Opposition Volume 15 Issue 3-4, Pages 486 – 496
- ↑ Harold Shukman, ‘Schapiro, Leonard Bertram (1908–1983)’, rev., Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, (Oxford University Press, 2004)
- ↑ Leoard Schapiro, ‘My Fifty Years of Social Science’, Government and Opposition Volume 15 Issue 3-4, Pages 486 – 496
- ↑ ‘SCHAPIRO, Prof. Leonard Bertram’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2007; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2007
- ↑ Leoard Schapiro, ‘My Fifty Years of Social Science’, Government and Opposition Volume 15 Issue 3-4, Pages 486 – 496
- ↑ Arnold Beichman, 'Peer review for shortcomings of Sovietology', The Washington Times, 9 November 1992
- ↑ Michael Howard, Captain Professor The Memoirs of Sir Michael Howard (Continuum International Publishing Group, 2006) pp.192-3
- ↑ John Jenks British Propaganda And News Media in the Cold War, Edinburgh:EUP, 2006, p.70