John Marks
Professor John Marks is a British nuclear physicist, educator and author. He has written extensively on British education and has co-authored, with Caroline Cox, This Immoral Trade: Slavery in the 21st Century, and The West, Islam and Islamism: Is Ideological Islam Compatible with Liberal Democracy?[1]
Affiliations
- Schools Examination and Assessment Council, 1990-3
- National Curriculum Council, 1992-3
- Schools Curriculum & Assessment Authority, 1993-7
- Centre for Social Cohesion - Advisory Council
- National Council for Educational Standards - Former Administrator
- Educational Research Trust - Co-director
- Prague Society for International Cooperation - Member
- Panellist at Identity Crisis: Can European civilization survive? a conference held in Rome on 13-14 March 2008, under the auspices of the European Freedom Alliance in conjunction with the European University of Rome and the Lepanto Foundation.[2]
Publications
- Relativity: A Non-Mathematical Introduction to the Classical, Special and General Theories of Relativity, Geoffrey Chapman, London, 1972.
- Science and the Making of the Modern World, Heinemann, Oxford, 1984.
- Fried Snowballs: Communism in Theory and Practice, Claridge Press, London, 1990.
- The Betrayed Generations: Standards in British Schools 1950-2000, Centre for Policy Studies, London, 2001.
- With Caroline Cox, Islam, Islamism and the West: The Divide Between Ideological Islam and Liberal Democracy, American Foreign Policy Council, Washington, 2005.
- With Caroline Cox, This Immoral Trade: Slavery in the 21st Century, Monarch Books, Toronto, 2006.
References
- ↑ Identity Crisis: Can European civilization survive? - Biographies, European Freedom Alliance, accessed 7 January 2009.
- ↑ Program - Identity Crisis: Can European civilization survive?, European Freedom Alliance, accessed 5 January 2009.