Geoffrey Alderman (born 10 February 1944, Middlesex, England) is a British historian, especially of the Jewish community in England in the 19th and 20th centuries, and also an academic, political adviser and award-winning journalist.
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Geoffrey Alderman studied history at Lincoln College, Oxford from 1962, gaining his B.A. in 1965 and an M.A. and D.Phil. in 1969. After short academic contracts at University College London, and the universities of Swansea and Reading he joined Royal Holloway College (University of London) in 1972, lecturing in politics and contemporary history. He was made Professor of Politics and Contemporary History in 1988.
From 1989 to 1994 he held senior administrative posts in the University of London and from 1994 to 1999 in Middlesex University. From 1999 he has worked in the private educational sector, in the U.S. (Touro College) and, from 2002 to 2006, at the American InterContinental University, London, where he was Academic Dean and Senior Vice-President. On 1 June 2007 Professor Alderman joined the University of Buckingham.
In 1971 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and in 1991 a Fellow (now a Life Fellow) of the Royal Society of Arts.
In 2006 he was awarded the degree of Doctor of Letters by the University of Oxford for his important work on Anglo-Jewish history.
In 2010 he was appointed a Visiting Fellow of the Oxford Centre for Higher Education Policy Studies.[1]
At a ceremony in London on 6 March 2011 Alderman was named as the winner of the Chaim Bermant Prize for Journalism 2011.[2]
Naomi Alderman, Geoffrey Alderman's daughter, was the author of the winning novel of the 2006 Orange Award for New Writers with Disobedience.
Of his dozen or so books, the best-known is Modern British Jewry (second edition, 1998, OUP). He has also written for the New Dictionary of National Biography, with special responsibility for post-1800 Jewish entries, and for The Guardian and The Jewish Chronicle.
As author:
as editor:
other works:
Alderman's comments in an article published in The Jewish Chronicle, drew criticism from some civil rights groups as Alderman accused Islam of being founded "in part, on an explicit anti-Jewish discourse.".[3]
In the summer of 2008, following his inaugural professorial lecture at the University of Buckingham, and criticisms of some aspects of UK higher education by the UK Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education, a brief parliamentary inquiry was undertaken into these allegations.[4][5] At that inquiry (17 July 2008) the chairman of the House of Commons’ Select Committee on Innovation, Universities and Skills accused the Quality Assurance Agency of being "toothless" and declared that the British degree classification system had "descended into farce".[6] Alderman himself gave written [3] and oral evidence to a subsequent enquiry of the Select Committee into Students and Universities, whose report (2 August 2009) included an endorsement of Alderman's views.[7]
On October 28, 2011 Professor Alderman wrote an article entitled "Freedom: the right to be unfair.", stating that it was well known that Charedi men are notorious harassers of women, citing a few isolated serious incidents as evidence. This prompted a number of complaints to the Press Complaints Commission, alleging that PCC Code of Practice, 1 Accuracy and code 12 Discrimination had been breached by Alderman and the JC [8]
He describes himself as an unconventional Orthodox Jew.[9] Alderman, writing in the Guardian, objected to the Atheist Bus Campaign, saying that faith was not a matter of reason, and that his relationship with God was an "intensely personal matter"[10]