- David Beetham
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David Beetham is a social theorist who has made extensive contributions in the fields of democracy and human rights; including in his approach to the role of not only social but also economic rights.
Contents
Career
Beetham worked at the University of Manchester until April 1980 when he left to take up the Professorship of Politics (succeeding Ralph Miliband) at the University of Leeds.
He has been on consultant on democracy to the Council of Europe, the Inter-Parliamentary Union and UNESCO. His study Introducing Democracy, 80 Questions and Answers (jointly authored with Professor Kevin Boyle of Essex University) was commissioned by Unesco and published world-wide in many languages. Closer to home, he is the initiator of the 'democratic audit'.[1]
The Democratic Audit
He is a major contributor and Associate Director of the UK Democratic Audit, which is based in the Human Rights Centre at the University of Essex.[2] He directed a programme on democracy and human rights for the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, Stockholm. Beetham describes the democratic audit as 'the simple but ambitious project of assessing the state of democracy in a single country'. It has been applied to assess the extent, and limits, of democracy in the United Kingdom.[3] His contributions to the democratic audit and assessment of democarcy led to his appointment as Director of Research at the IDEA (International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assessment), Stockholm.
Beetham is the a leading authority on Max Weber. His authority was established through the publication ofin 1974 of his book Max Weber and the Theory of Modern Politics. He also pioneered élite theory, drawing attention to the writings of Robert Michels. He also made susbtantial contributions in Marxist theories and analyses of fascism, and produced the famous The Legitimation of Power.
He also holds a position as a Professor Emeritus at the University of Leeds.[4]
Key works
David Beetham (1974) Max Weber and the Theory of Modern Politics
This work examines Weber's discussions of the prospects for liberal Parliamentarism in authoritarian societies. This is within an age defined by both mass politics and bureaucratic organization. Beetham argues that Weber's analysis of the class basis of politics means that we should modify some of the more standard interpretations of Weber's sociology of modern capitalism. The book also includes Weber's discussion of Wilhelmine Germany and the 1905 and 1917 Russian revolutions.
David Beetham (1991) The Legitimation of Power
This work explores the legitimation of power not only as an issue in political and social theory but also with regards to the legitimacy of contemporary political systems.
References
- ^ http://reporter.leeds.ac.uk/478/beetham.htm
- ^ http://www2.essex.ac.uk/human_rights_centre/about/index.shtm
- ^ Beetham, David and Weir Stuart(1999) Political Power and Democratic Control in Britain
- ^ http://www2.essex.ac.uk/human_rights_centre/people/fellows/beetham.shtm
Categories:- English political scientists
- Living people
- British academic biography stubs
- Political scientist stubs
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