Colin Leys
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Colin Temple Leys
Early life and education
This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (January 2018) |
Leys is the oldest of the six children of a social worker and a doctor. He was educated at Edinburgh Academy and Dulwich College, where he studied Latin and ancient Greek. As a teenager in Inverness he developed a lasting love of the countryside and natural history.
After winning an Open Exhibition in classics at
Career
From 1956 to 1960 Leys was an Official Fellow and Tutor in Politics at
Leys's initial interest in Africa was prompted by reading the anti-racist books on Kenya written in the inter-war years by his half-uncle Norman Leys, a doctor in the colonial medical service (Kenya, The Colour Bar in East Africa, and Last Chance in Kenya): Colin Leys's initial field work in the Rhodesias confronted exactly the same problem. Later, in East Africa, his focus shifted to the issues of 'nation-building' in ethnically diverse ex-colonies and, finally, to the formation of new African classes, and especially proto-capitalist classes, and the different paths of national development chosen by newly independent African governments. The contribution of theorists of neo-colonialism and dependency such as Frantz Fanon and Andre Gunder Frank to understanding these developments led Leys to engage more seriously with the classical Marxist tradition and influenced his later work on the development of advanced capitalist countries under the impact of globalisation. Other activities during these years included writing commissioned reports on the creation of universities in Mauritius, the Bahamas, and Namibia; serving on a commission on the electoral system of Mauritius; co-editing with Leo Panitch the annual Socialist Register; and founding and chairing the Centre for Health and the Public Interest in London. From 1966 to 1976 he co-edited the Journal of Commonwealth Political Studies (subsequently Commonwealth & Comparative Politics).
Major publications
As of 2017, Leys has published 33 books and 68 chapters and journal papers. Among his major publications, European Politics in Southern Rhodesia (1959) was one of the first African "country studies". It traced the origins and underpinnings of white supremacy in the Rhodesias and correctly predicted the consolidation of racist government in Southern Rhodesia that followed the collapse of the
Underdevelopment in Kenya: the political economy of neo-colonialism (1975) described the emergence of the ethnically-based post-independence class system in Kenya and the constraints imposed on development by the complex dependence of the country's new capitalist class on external forces. In 1978 Leys modified his view of the limits imposed by these constraints, giving rise to a so-called "Kenya Debate".
In The Rise and Fall of Development Theory (1996) Leys summed up three decades of work on development, arguing for the reinstatement of a focus on the political assumptions of development that had characterised the study of development before the onset of neoliberal globalisation.
Market-Driven Politics: Neoliberal Democracy and the Public Interest (2001) tested the hypothesis that in a fully globalised capitalist economy, with free capital movement, advanced capitalist countries such as Britain would find their development constrained by global market forces in much the same way that ex-colonies had always been.
Honours
This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (January 2018) |
- Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada (FRSC), 1985;
- Hon. D.C.L., University of Mauritius, 1986;
- Ethel Meade Award, Ontario Health Coalition, 2011.
Key works
- European Politics in Southern Rhodesia (Oxford, 1959)
- Underdevelopment in Kenya; The Political Economy of Neocolonialism (James Currey and University of California Press, 1975)
- Politics in Britain (Verso1986 and 1989)
- The Rise and Fall of Development Theory (Indiana University Press, 1996)
- Namibia's Liberation Struggle: The two-edged sword (with John S. Saul, James Currey and Ohio University Press, 1995)
- The End of Parliamentary Socialism (with Leo Panitch, Verso, 1997)
- Market-Driven Politics: Neoliberal democracy and the public interest (Verso, 2001)
- Histories of Namibia: Living through the liberation struggle (edited with Susan Brown, Merlin Press, 2005)
- The Plot Against the NHS (with Stewart Player, Merlin Press, 2011)
- There is an archive of 16 files of papers relating to his research for Politicians and Policies: An essay on politics in Acholi, Uganda, 1962–1965 (East African Publishing House, 1967) held at the University of Sussex.[4]
References
- ^ "Department of Political Studies - Colin Leys". Archived from the original on 2012-09-07. Retrieved 2012-02-24.
- ^ "Archives | Socialist Register".
- ISBN 978-0-7735-2252-7.
- ^ "University of Sussex Library Special Collections: Colin Leys Papers".