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Alfred Eckhard Zimmern - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alfred Eckhard Zimmern

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sir Alfred Eckhard Zimmern (Surbiton, Surrey, UK 1879-Hartford, Connecticut, USA 1957) was a British classical scholar and historian, and political scientist writing on international relations.

His father was a German Jew; he was brought up a Christian, and was later an active participant in the World Council of Churches. He was educated at Winchester College, and read classics at New College, Oxford. At Berlin University, he came under the influence of Wilamowitz and Meyer.

He was one of the first, in his book The Third British Empire, to use the expression "British Commonwealth" for the British Empire[1] He is also credited with the phrase "welfare state"[2][3][4], made popular a few years later by William Temple[5].

Contents

[edit] Academic career

He was Lecturer in Ancient History, New College, Oxford (1903) and Fellow and tutor, New College (1904-09). Subsequently he was staff inspector, Board of Education (1912-15) and a member, Political Intelligence Department, Foreign Office (1918-19).

He was then Wilson Professor of International Politics, University College of Wales (1919-21); having left Aberystwyth, he taught at Cornell University in 1922 and 1923.[6][7].

He was professor of International Relations, Oxford University (1930-44); co-founder, Royal Institute of International Affairs (1919); London Round Table Group (1913-1920s).

[edit] Internationalism

He has been classified as a utopian and idealist thinker on international relations[8][9]. He is cited often, in this perspective, in E. H. Carr's The Twenty Years' Crisis (1939); Carr and Zimmern are characterised[10] as at opposite ends of the theoretical and political spectrum.

He contributed to the founding of both the League of Nations Society, and UNESCO[11]. He joined the Labour Party in 1924, contesting the constituency of David Lloyd George in that year. He was Deputy Director of the Institute for Intellectual Co-operation, in Paris, in the mid-1920s[12]; after tension with the Director, the French historian Julien Lachaire, both left[13]. He was nominated in 1947 for the Nobel Peace Prize[14], in connection with his UNESCO work.

[edit] Works

  • Nationality and Government (1918)
  • Europe in Convalescence (1922) online text
  • America and Europe
  • Prospects of Democracy & Other Essays
  • The Greek Commonwealth Politics and Economics in Fifth Century Athens, 1911; 5th ed. 1931, Oxford, reprint 1977
  • The Economic Weapon Against Germany, London: Allen & Unwin, 1918
  • The Third British Empire (1926; 3.ed. 1934), London: Oxford U.P.
  • The League of Nations and the Rule of Law, 1918-1935

[edit] Further reading

  • Jeanne Morefield (2004), Covenants Without Swords: Idealist Liberalism and the Spirit of Empire, on Zimmern and Gilbert Murray

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Discussed in J. D. B. Miller, The Commonwealth and World Order: The Zimmern Vision and After (1979),. Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 8: p. 162.
  2. ^ welfare state
  3. ^ Book extract
  4. ^ Kathleen Woodroofe, The Making of the Welfare State in England: A Summary of Its Origin and Development, Journal of Social History, Vol. 1, No. 4 (Summer, 1968), pp. 303-324.
  5. ^ Oxford English Dictionary, from 1941.
  6. ^ Cornell University Information Database
  7. ^ Time magazine comments.
  8. ^ In addition to Dickinson, the list of contributors to this utopian literature included Nicholas Murray Butler, James T. Shotwell, Alfred Zimmern, Norman Angell, and Gilbert Murray.[1]
  9. ^ Idealism (or ‘utopianism’) and power (or ‘realism’) are often portrayed as mutually exclusive and contradictory philosophies or attitudes to global affairs. [...] When the intellectual roots of the leaders of Chatham House (Lionel Curtis, Philip Kerr, Arnold Toynbee, Alfred Zimmern) and the Council on Foreign Relations (Hamilton Fish Armstrong, Whitney Hart Shepardson, Russell Cornell Leffingwell) are examined, it is clear that each category of their thought may be interpreted as a combination of idealism and power.[2]
  10. ^ 2001 edition of the Crisis, introduction by Michael Cox, note p. xciii.
  11. ^ Richard Toye - | UNESCO.ORG
  12. ^ PDF, p. 22.
  13. ^ Duncan Wilson, Gilbert Murray, p. 357.
  14. ^ Nomination database

[edit] External links


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