• Episode - 8 Bryan Gould CNZM

  • 2024/09/10
  • 再生時間: 17 分
  • ポッドキャスト

Episode - 8 Bryan Gould CNZM

  • サマリー

  • Bryan Gould is one of the Left’s clearest thinkers whose books and articles have certainly influenced my own views economics, political and society. So when the opportunity came up to interview him I asked if we could talk face to face rather than doing a Zoom type computer interview.The 17 minute segment I have posted here is just a fraction of what we talked about but it contains his challenge to the political Left in New Zealand - a challenge from someone who has not just been a brilliant academic and author, but was an elected MP in the British Parliament for 15 years who almost became the leader of the UK Labour Party.It was such a privilege to talk with him about the big stuff that really matters.Thanks Bryan.Below is just some of his biography an accomplishments.Bryan Gould was born in 1939 in Hawera, New Zealand. He attended Tauranga College and Dannevirke High School and was dux of his primary and secondary schools. At the age of 15 he won a National University Scholarship. At Victoria and Auckland Universities, he completed a B.A. Ll.B., and an Ll.M. with first-class honours and won the Senior Scholarship in Law at Auckland University.In 1962, a Rhodes Scholarship took him to Balliol College, Oxford, where he completed a post-graduate law degree, the B.C.L., with first-class honours. He joined the British Diplomatic Service in 1964 as the top entrant of his year and served in the Foreign Office and the Brussels Embassy.He returned to Oxford in 1968 as a law don and Secretary to the Governing Body at Worcester College. He was an Examiner in Law for the University and in 1971 published an article in the law journal Public Law which was an important contribution to the development of the law on judicial review.In 1974, he was elected to the House of Commons as Labour MP for the marginal seat of Southampton Test. He was appointed Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Rt. Hon. Peter Shore MP. On losing the seat in the 1979 general election, he joined Thames Television as a presenter and reporter on the nationally networked current affairs programme, TV Eye.He returned to the House of Commons in 1983 as Labour MP for Dagenham. He was elected to the Shadow Cabinet in 1986 and was the Labour Party’s Campaign Director in the 1987 general election. He served in the Shadow Cabinet as Shadow Chief Secretary, Shadow Secretary for Trade and Industry, Shadow Secretary for the Environment, and Shadow Heritage Secretary. He founded the Full Employment Forum in 1992. He contested the Labour Party leadership in 1992 but was defeated by John Smith.He returned to New Zealand in 1994 as Vice-Chancellor of the University of Waikato. He chaired the New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’ Committee for two years. He is Chair of the National Centre for Tertiary Teaching Excellence and at the request of the Ministry of Research, Science and Technology served as a Mentor to a newly formed group of younger social science researchers – He Waka Tangata. On stepping down from the University in 2004, he was made a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit and in 2006 was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by the University of Waikato. He chaired the Foundation for Research, Science and Technology for three years from 2008, and the New Zealand National Commission for UNESCO, and currently chairs the Eastern Bay Primary Health Alliance. He is a member of the Bay of Plenty Polytechnic’s Council and is a trustee of the Opotiki Community Foundation.He was a Visiting Fellow at Nuffield College, Oxford in 2005 and was made a Director of Television New Zealand in 2004. He currently lives at Ohiwa, in New Zealand’s Bay of Plenty, with his wife Gillian and West Highland White Terrier, Lachie. Gill and Bryan have two children – a son, Charles, who lives in Brighton, England, with his wife Angela and their children Anna, Tom and Hugh, and a daughter, Helen, who lives in Omokoroa, New Zealand, with her children Tessa, Nathaniel and Benjamin.PublicationsBryan Gould has co-authored a number of books, including A Charter for the Disabled (1981) and Monetarism or Prosperity? (1981). His other books include Socialism and Freedom (1985), A Future for Socialism (1989) and the autobiographical Goodbye to All That (1995). The Democracy Sham: How Globalisation Devalues Your Vote was published in September 2006 and Rescuing the New Zealand Economy in 2007. He is currently working on a book on moral philosophy.Bryan Gould has written many articles and pamphlets for the Fabian Society, for the House Magazine, for all the leading British newspapers and political journals, and for leading New Zealand newspapers and publications.Political InterestsBryan Gould has been a member of the Labour Parties in Britain and New Zealand for over 45 years. He has written widely on political issues, drawing on his expertise in economics, law, education, the media and international affairs. He was an influential thinker and ...
    続きを読む 一部表示

あらすじ・解説

Bryan Gould is one of the Left’s clearest thinkers whose books and articles have certainly influenced my own views economics, political and society. So when the opportunity came up to interview him I asked if we could talk face to face rather than doing a Zoom type computer interview.The 17 minute segment I have posted here is just a fraction of what we talked about but it contains his challenge to the political Left in New Zealand - a challenge from someone who has not just been a brilliant academic and author, but was an elected MP in the British Parliament for 15 years who almost became the leader of the UK Labour Party.It was such a privilege to talk with him about the big stuff that really matters.Thanks Bryan.Below is just some of his biography an accomplishments.Bryan Gould was born in 1939 in Hawera, New Zealand. He attended Tauranga College and Dannevirke High School and was dux of his primary and secondary schools. At the age of 15 he won a National University Scholarship. At Victoria and Auckland Universities, he completed a B.A. Ll.B., and an Ll.M. with first-class honours and won the Senior Scholarship in Law at Auckland University.In 1962, a Rhodes Scholarship took him to Balliol College, Oxford, where he completed a post-graduate law degree, the B.C.L., with first-class honours. He joined the British Diplomatic Service in 1964 as the top entrant of his year and served in the Foreign Office and the Brussels Embassy.He returned to Oxford in 1968 as a law don and Secretary to the Governing Body at Worcester College. He was an Examiner in Law for the University and in 1971 published an article in the law journal Public Law which was an important contribution to the development of the law on judicial review.In 1974, he was elected to the House of Commons as Labour MP for the marginal seat of Southampton Test. He was appointed Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Rt. Hon. Peter Shore MP. On losing the seat in the 1979 general election, he joined Thames Television as a presenter and reporter on the nationally networked current affairs programme, TV Eye.He returned to the House of Commons in 1983 as Labour MP for Dagenham. He was elected to the Shadow Cabinet in 1986 and was the Labour Party’s Campaign Director in the 1987 general election. He served in the Shadow Cabinet as Shadow Chief Secretary, Shadow Secretary for Trade and Industry, Shadow Secretary for the Environment, and Shadow Heritage Secretary. He founded the Full Employment Forum in 1992. He contested the Labour Party leadership in 1992 but was defeated by John Smith.He returned to New Zealand in 1994 as Vice-Chancellor of the University of Waikato. He chaired the New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’ Committee for two years. He is Chair of the National Centre for Tertiary Teaching Excellence and at the request of the Ministry of Research, Science and Technology served as a Mentor to a newly formed group of younger social science researchers – He Waka Tangata. On stepping down from the University in 2004, he was made a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit and in 2006 was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by the University of Waikato. He chaired the Foundation for Research, Science and Technology for three years from 2008, and the New Zealand National Commission for UNESCO, and currently chairs the Eastern Bay Primary Health Alliance. He is a member of the Bay of Plenty Polytechnic’s Council and is a trustee of the Opotiki Community Foundation.He was a Visiting Fellow at Nuffield College, Oxford in 2005 and was made a Director of Television New Zealand in 2004. He currently lives at Ohiwa, in New Zealand’s Bay of Plenty, with his wife Gillian and West Highland White Terrier, Lachie. Gill and Bryan have two children – a son, Charles, who lives in Brighton, England, with his wife Angela and their children Anna, Tom and Hugh, and a daughter, Helen, who lives in Omokoroa, New Zealand, with her children Tessa, Nathaniel and Benjamin.PublicationsBryan Gould has co-authored a number of books, including A Charter for the Disabled (1981) and Monetarism or Prosperity? (1981). His other books include Socialism and Freedom (1985), A Future for Socialism (1989) and the autobiographical Goodbye to All That (1995). The Democracy Sham: How Globalisation Devalues Your Vote was published in September 2006 and Rescuing the New Zealand Economy in 2007. He is currently working on a book on moral philosophy.Bryan Gould has written many articles and pamphlets for the Fabian Society, for the House Magazine, for all the leading British newspapers and political journals, and for leading New Zealand newspapers and publications.Political InterestsBryan Gould has been a member of the Labour Parties in Britain and New Zealand for over 45 years. He has written widely on political issues, drawing on his expertise in economics, law, education, the media and international affairs. He was an influential thinker and ...

Episode - 8 Bryan Gould CNZMに寄せられたリスナーの声

カスタマーレビュー:以下のタブを選択することで、他のサイトのレビューをご覧になれます。