Archie Brown (historian)
Archibald Haworth Brown, is a British political scientist. In 2005, he became an emeritus professor of politics at the University of Oxford and an emeritus fellow of St Antony's College, Oxford, where he served as a professor of politics and director of St Antony's Russian and East European Centre. He has written widely on Soviet and Russian politics, on communist politics more generally, on the Cold War, and on political leadership.
Career
Brown taught at the University of Glasgow from 1964 to 1971, during which time he was a British Council exchange scholar at Moscow State University for the academic year 1967–68.In 1998, he was a Distinguished Visiting Fellow of the Helen Kellogg Institute for International Studies at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana. He was Director of Graduate Studies in Politics for Oxford University between 2001 and 2003.
The Human Factor: Gorbachev, Reagan, and Thatcher, and the End of the Cold War was published in 2020. It was awarded the Pushkin House Book Prize 2021. The Human Factor was described by the chair of the panel of judges Dr Fiona Hill, former Senior Director for Russian and European Affairs in the US National Security Council, as representing "the very best in western scholarship on Russia and comparative politics" and containing "a lifetime’s achievement of wisdom and insight".
Honours
He was appointed as a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George in the Queen's Birthday Honours list in 2005 "for services to UK-Russian relations and to the study of political science and international affairs".Books in honour of Archie Brown
- 'Archie Brown' in Pravda, A., Leading Russia. Putin in Perspective: Essays in Honour of Archie Brown, 2005,
- Stephen Whitefield, Political Culture and Post-Communism, 2005,
- Julie Newton and William Tompson, Institutions, Ideas and Leadership in Russian Politics, 2010,