Glen Newey

Professor Glen Newey is a political philosopher who was Professor in the School of Politics, International Relations & Philosophy at Keele University, Staffordshire, England. From 2012 he is Professor of Political Theory at the Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium. He contributes regularly to the London Review of Books blog and print edition. His articles and publications are often very informal in vein; in one article entitled As Useful as a String Condom[1] Newey wittily slates the British Royal Family as being of no use anymore in modern Britain. His journalistic output also includes film and theatre reviews, as well as review essays on political and moral philosophy, and cultural criticism. He is also a strong defender of academic freedom.

Contents

Background

Glen Newey was educated at Jesus College, Cambridge where he received a degree in History and Philosophy. He completed Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy degrees at the University of York, where his doctoral supervisor was Professor John Horton. Before working at Keele University, Newey had taught at the University of Sussex, University of Strathclyde, University of York, Birkbeck College and the University of Oxford.

Area of Specialisation

Glen Newey's main research interests are in political philosophy. His work is on toleration, the nature of politics, political morality, including the ethics of deception in public life, security, freedom of speech, and the political theory of Thomas Hobbes. He argues that modern liberalism, as defended by John Rawls and his followers, sidelines politics in favour of a moralised account of public life. Presently, his work concentrates upon the relationship between security and other political concepts, including mostly liberty and toleration. Political deception is another area of interest for Newey. Between 2008 and 2010 he was situated in Helsinki Collegium, carrying out research on these topics.

Other areas of interest include toleration, Hobbes's political philosophy and the philosophical basis that political systems are built upon. His academic and journalistic output examines liberal views and develops an alternative to them. Newey is a prominent member of the "Realist" school of political philosophers which also includes such figures as Bernard Williams, John N. Gray, and Raymond Geuss.

Publications

Books

Journal editions

Articles

Routledge)

(Guangzhou: Zhangyong University Press)

Neutrality and Democracy (Dordrecht: Kluwer); repr. from Castiglione & McKinnon (eds.), Res Publica 7 (iii), pp315–336 (special issue on “Toleration: Moral and Political”)

Broadcasting

BBC Radio 4 (The World Tonight); BBC Radio 3 (Sunday Feature); Fox Television News, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (The Current); radio news broadcasts in Austria, Australia, South Africa, Brazil, Ireland, etc.

References