Rupert Taylor

Rupert Taylor (born 1958), is a Professor of Political Studies and former Head of the Department of Political Studies at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, from 1987 to 2013. He was educated at the progressive independent Dartington Hall School in England and completed a BA degree in Politics and Government at the University of Kent in 1980, followed by an MSc at the London School of Economics (1981) and a PhD in Sociology at Kent, (1986). He was formerly a Visiting Research Fellow in the Department of Political Science at the New School for Social Research in New York City, Adjunct Professor in the Department of Political Science at Columbia University and a Visiting Research Fellow in the School of Politics, Queen's University Belfast.

Publications include articles in African Affairs, Ethnic and Racial Studies, Peace and Change, The Political Quarterly, Race and Class, The Round Table, and TELOS. He was editor of Politikon and Voluntas: International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit Organizations.

Rupert Taylor is a “B” rated National Research Foundation scholar and many of his publications can be accessed at https://independent.academia.edu/RupertTaylor

Early career

As a Masters student at the London School of Economics Taylor achieved the highest distinction grade for the degree. His doctoral dissertation highlighted the problems confronting Queen’s University Belfast in trying to maintain a liberal position in a deeply divided society and helped initiate the reform of sectarian employment practices in higher education in Northern Ireland. In 1984 his research findings were reported in the British and Irish media, and stimulated a Fair Employment Agency enquiry that resulted in new employment equity guidelines. Taylor’s doctoral research was acknowledged in John Whyte’s Interpreting Northern Ireland (Oxford University Press, 1990).

Consociationalism

Taylor's research interests include political violence, transitions to democracy and non-governmental organisations. He has written widely about South African politics and the Northern Ireland conflict. He has been critical of consociationalism as a strategy of conflict management.[1] His scholarly career centred on engagement with consociational theory. His undergraduate dissertation on the topic was awarded first class. He engaged in scholarly debate with Arend Lijphart in Johannesburg in the late 1980s over the prospects for consociational democracy in South Africa – in particular through interrogating the meaning of ethnicity in consociational theory and through comparison with Northern Ireland.

Whilst at the New School for Research in New York (1993–94), Taylor developed a deeper critique of the way in which political science has dealt with race and ethnicity (expounded in the Ethnic and Racial Studies award winning paper). This led him to propose a social transformation theory as a compelling way to bring about democratic peace in societies marked by racial and ethnic division – see his "Northern Ireland: Consociation or Social Transformation" chapter in John McGarry’s Northern Ireland and the Divided World (Oxford University Press, 2001). Taylor’s position on consociationalism is widely acknowledged in the political science literature on the Northern Ireland conflict and the South African transition from apartheid to democracy, a position consolidated with the recent publication of the edited volume on Consociational Theory (Routledge, 2009).

Taylor participated in a two-year international study of peace and conflict organisations in Northern Ireland, Israel/Palestine and South Africa. This study was conducted in collaboration with the International Society for Third Sector Research (ISTR), involved academics from Princeton University, Ben Gurion University, Tel Aviv University, University of Ulster and Bethlehem University, and was presented at the ISTR conference in Geneva in 1998. This led to the publication of Gidron, Katz, and Hasenfeld (eds), Mobilizing for Peace (Oxford University Press, 2002). Taylor authored the chapter on South Africa. This book won the Virginia Hodgkinson Independent Sector research prize (2003).

South Africa

Taylor’s peer-reviewed papers on the causes of political violence in South Africa have been referred to in many international publications. One such paper, published in African Affairs (2002), examines the structural nature of post-apartheid political violence in KwaZulu-Natal. Another is the earlier Race and Class paper (1991) on township political violence. In The Politics of Truth and Reconciliation in South Africa (Cambridge University Press, 2001), Wilson wrote that “Rupert Taylor came up with sophisticated theories of apartheid violence.” Taylor has made a contribution to South African electoral studies, particularly questioning the veracity of the dominant “racial census” approach to understanding voting behaviour in the 1994 and 1999 elections. He wrote a number of papers on non-racialism in South Africa, and along with Orkin wrote a substantial chapter on the racialisation of social scientific research on South Africa that attracted a scholarly response in the South African Sociological Review. Taylor has published two well-cited papers with Habib (Vice-Chancellor of Wits University) on opposition politics and the state of the South African nonprofit sector.

Editor of Voluntas

In 2000 Taylor was appointed editor of the ISTR journal Voluntas: International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit Organizations. As editor, he took the journal to Springer, a new major international publisher. As a result of Taylor’s editorial direction the global academic visibility of Voluntas dramatically increased. It is now an ISA-rated journal and the leading journal focusing on the scholarly study of the third sector. Taylor served as editor until 2009 and compiled an edited volume on Third Sector Research (Springer, 2010).

Dismissal from Wits University

Taylor was placed on special leave by Wits University in 2013 following allegations of sexual harassment,[2][3][4] which he disputed, and was subsequently dismissed from his position.[5][6]

Selected publications

References

  1. Taylor, Rupert (2006). "The Belfast Agreement and the politics of consociationalism: A critique" (abstract). The Political Quarterly. 77 (2): 217–226. doi:10.1111/j.1467-923X.2006.00764.x.
  2. "Wits professor accused of sexual harassment put on leave". sabc.com. SABC News. 23 April 2013. Retrieved 2 November 2013.
  3. "Wits prof accused of sexual harassment placed on special leave". citypress.co.za. City Press (South Africa). 22 April 2013. Retrieved 2 November 2013.
  4. Chauke, Amukelani (22 April 2013). "Professor frog-marched off Wits campus". BizCommunity Daily Industry News. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
  5. Louw, Poppy (6 September 2013). "Wits fires third 'sex pest'". The Times (South Africa). Retrieved 2 November 2013.
  6. Mtshali, Nontobeki (6 September 2013). "Wits fires third sex pest". Independent Online (South Africa). Retrieved 2 November 2013.
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