Phil Mullan

From Powerbase
Revision as of 10:12, 2 January 2011 by S Ross (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

Phil Mullan, who formerly used the pseudonym Phil Murphy, is an economist and business manager and is associated with the libertarian anti-environmental LM network. He has been a member of the RCT and RCP, national organiser of the Irish Freedom Movement (in 1988),[1] a contributor to Living Marxism, Channel Cyberia, the Institute of Ideas and Spiked, [2], a registrant of the Spiked website, a shareholder of the Academy of Ideas and a trustee of Global Futures.


His Battle of Ideas biographical note is rather modest about his long term involvement with the LM network, though it does mention his spell at the University of Kent where he came under the spell of Frank Furedi and the Revolutionary Communist Tendency:

Phil Mullan is an economist and business manager. Author of The Imaginary Time Bomb: Why an Ageing Population is not a Social Problem, he has researched, written and lectured on economic, demographic and business issues. Research projects have included work for the London East Research Institute at the University of East London and the Tomorrow’s Company business think-tank.
He alternates, and sometimes combines, work as an economist with business management, and currently is working full time as UK Managing Director of Easynet Global Services, the global corporate communication services company. Born in Belfast, Phil moved to Britain in the early seventies where he gained a BA in Economics from Kent University. He also holds a CIMA Certificate in Business Accounting.[3]

Publications

  • Andrew Clarkson and Phil Murphy 'The Loyalist working class', in World in Recession Revolutionary Communist Papers, No 7 July 1981. p. 27-36.

Notes

  1. STEWART TENDLER and MICHAEL HORSNELL 'German link to Mill Hill bomb; IRA activity marks 20 years of troubles; Inglis Barracks', The Times (London) August 5 1988, Friday, Issue 63152.
  2. "Articles by Phil Mullan" Spiked website, accessed 2 May 2010
  3. Battle of Ideas Phil Mullan, accessed 25 November 2010