Difference between revisions of "John Lloyd"
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Revision as of 17:25, 30 April 2009
John Nicol Fortune Lloyd (born 15 April 1946) is a British journalist who for most of his career has been associated with the Financial Times, but who has also written for and at one time edited the New Statesman. He identifies himself as a liberal but is a prominent pro-war activist. He left the News Statesman in 2003 after being dubbed the magazine’s “house reactionary” by one of his colleagues.[1]
Contents
Affiliations
- East-West Institute
- Demos
- Foreign Policy Centre
- Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
- Polis, adviser
- Campaign for Press Freedom, 1980
- Euston Manifesto, signatory
- Prospect Magazine, board member
- Moscow School of Political Studies
Books
- Charles Leadbeater, John Lloyd, In search of work (Penguin Books Ltd 1987) ISBN 0140227733; 9780140227734
- Martin Adeney, John Lloyd, The miners' strike, 1984-85: Loss Without Limit (Routledge, 1988) ISBN 0710213719; 9780710213716
- Charles Leadbeater, John Lloyd,
- John Lloyd, Rebirth of a nation: an anatomy of Russia (London : M. Joseph, 1998) ISBN 0718138627; 9780718138622
- John Lloyd, Re-engaging Russia (Foreign Policy Centre, 2000) ISBN 0953559866 9780953559862
- John Lloyd, The protest ethic: how the anti-globalisation movement challenges social democracy (London: Demos, 2001) ISBN 1841800090 9781841800097
- John Lloyd, What the media are doing to our politics (London: Constable, 2004)
ISBN 1841199001; 9781841199009
Resources
- Neocon Europe John Lloyd
Notes
- ↑ John Lloyd, Why I can no longer write for the NS, New Statesman 14 April 2003.