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David George Green

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Occupation
  
CEO of Civitas

Name
  
David Green

Role
  
Author


Born
  
1951
UK

Books
  
Benefit Dependency, An End to Welfare Rights

People also search for
  
Judith Allsop, Michael Goldsmith, Chris Ham

David G. Green (born 24 January 1951) is the chief executive of the British think tank Civitas, which he founded in 2000. He is an author who also writes for British newspapers, including The Sunday Times, The Times, the Daily Mail, the Sunday Telegraph and the Daily Telegraph, and taken part in broadcast programmes such as Newsnight, the Moral Maze and Today. He has made occasional contributions to the Guardian’s Comment is Free site, and he has contributed pieces to Daily Telegraph news blogs.

Contents

Early life

He was born in Thetford, England in 1951 and brought up in Norfolk and Lancashire. He attended the state-run boarding grammar school, Wymondham College, from 1962 until 1969 and worked in manufacturing industry for a few months before going to university.

Education and career

He was an undergraduate at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne from 1970 to 1973 and remained there for his PhD. He was a Labour councillor in Newcastle upon Tyne from 1976 until 1981 before leaving the UK from 1981 to 1983 to work as a Research Fellow at the Australian National University in Canberra. He worked at the Institute of Economic Affairs from 1984, and was Director of its Health and Welfare Unit from 1986 to 2000. He has been the chief executive of the think tank Civitas from 2000 to the current day.

His work has received public recognition. His book, Community Without Politics (London, IEA, 1997) was awarded the Sir Anthony Fisher Memorial Prize in 1997. In 2004 he was voted one of Britain’s top 100 British intellectuals by readers of Prospect Magazine. And in 2009 he was included on the Evening Standard’s list of the 1,000 most influential Londoners. His 1993 book, Reinventing Civil Society has been translated into Chinese and Russian.

References

David George Green Wikipedia


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