Dave Renton

Dave Renton

David (Dave) Renton, (born December 1972),[1] is a historian, barrister, and former member of the Labour Party and the Socialist Workers Party (SWP).

Early life and education

Renton was born in London in 1972. He was educated at Eton College where became a member of the Labour Party. He then studied history at St John's College, Oxford under the labour historian Ross McKibbin.[2]

Before becoming a Barrister, Renton was an academic historian and sociologist, teaching at universities including Nottingham Trent, Edge Hill, Sunderland University, and Rhodes and Johannesburg Universities in South Africa.

He joined the Socialist Workers Party in 1991 (reluctantly resigning in 2013).[3]

Renton was also a county-standard middle-distance runner. He is a follower of Liverpool football club.

Historical writing

Renton's first short book, based on his undergraduate dissertation, was a pamphlet history of anti-fascism in 1930s Oxford. This was followed by a PhD at the University of Sheffield on fascism and anti-fascism in 1940s Britain. Renton studied there under Professor Colin Holmes and Dr Richard Thurlow.

Renton's book Fascism, theory and practice criticised the "new consensus" theory of fascism associated with Roger Griffin and others, in which fascism is understood as a form of palingenetic ultranationalism. Renton's approach was to analyse fascism as a specific form of reactionary mass politics. In contrast to Griffin, Renton placed greater emphasis on what he portrayed as a key contradiction between the popular support many fascist parties have enjoyed, and their ideology, which he characterised as radically inegalitarian and anti-democratic. Fascism, in Renton's argument, was always a tentative politics, capable of rapid growth but also (if opposed) organisational lethargy or even collapse.[4]

His 2000 book Fascism, Anti-Fascism and the 1940s was widely reviewed internationally.[5][6][7]

In When we touched the Sky, Renton considered the part played by British anti-fascists in the Anti-Nazi League in bringing about the defeat of the National Front.

Renton has also written histories of the British Communist Party and biographies of Leon Trotsky and C.L.R. James.

Law

Since 2009, Renton has practised as a barrister at Garden Court chambers in London, in employment, housing and family law.[8]

Renton's clients have included the Bank of Ideas and Dave Smith, a construction worker who in 2012 and 2013 sued Carillion (JM) Ltd for blacklisting, in the aftermath of the Consulting Association scandal.[9]

Renton is the author of the employment law blog Struck Out, which accompanies a book of the same name.

Political activism

In 2003–2006, when Renton worked full-time as a national official of the lecturers' union Natfhe (now the University and College Union), he was a member of the national steering committee of Unite Against Fascism.

He is a member of the London Socialist Historians Group and the Haldane Society of Socialist Lawyers.

Books

References

  1. The Rentons: A Family History by Dave Renton, dkrenton.co.uk, 2013. Retrieved 6 October 2013. Archived here.
  2. Biography by Dave Renton, dkrenton.co.uk, 2013. Retrieved 6 October 2013. Archived here.
  3. Dave Renton "To my comrades, of any party or none", livesrunning, 17 December 2013
  4. See the reviews listed at http://dkrenton.co.uk/theory.html
  5. Kelly, Sean (Spring 2001) Fascism, Anti-Fascism and the 1940s (review), Labour History Review, page 112.
  6. Coupland, Philip (August 2002) Fascism, Anti-Fascism and the 1940s (review), Canadian Journal of History, page 391.
  7. Cronin, Mike (October 2001) Reviews of Books: Europe: Early Modern and Modern, American Historical Review, page 1459.
  8. David Renton, Garden Court Chambers, April 2013. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  9. David Renton acting in Employment Appeal Tribunal case on blacklisting, Garden Court Chambers, October 2013. Retrieved 11 October 2013. Archived here.
  10. Thorpe, Andrew (2007) Review of Nigel Copsey, and David Renton. "British Fascism, the Labour Movement and the State." The English Historical Review. 122.495: 281–283. Print.

External links