James Robertson (activist)
James Hugh Robertson was a British political and economic thinker and activist, who became an independent writer and speaker in 1974 after an early career as a British civil servant.
Biography
James Hugh Robertson was born on 11 August 1928. He was educated at Sedbergh School and thereafter studied Greats at Balliol College, Oxford, from 1946 to 1950, where he played cricket and rugby union, and ran cross-country for the university.After serving on British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan’s staff during his "Wind of Change" tour of Africa in 1960, Robertson spent three years in the Cabinet Office. Following that he became director of the Inter-Bank Research Organisation for the big British banks.
In the mid-1980s Robertson was a prominent co-founder of The Other Economic Summit (TOES) and the New Economics Foundation (NEF). He was a member of FEASTA and a patron of SANE, which was set up following his visit there in 1996.
In October 2003, at the XXIX annual conference of the Pio Manzù International Research Centre, Rimini, Italy, he was awarded a gold medal for his "remarkable contribution to the promotion of a new economics grounded in social and spiritual values" over the past 25 years.
Robertson joined the advisory board of International Simultaneous Policy Organization which seeks to end the usual deadlock in tackling global issues through an international simultaneous policy.
One of Robertson's last books was the Future Money: Breakdown or Breakthrough?.
James Robertson and his wife, Alison lived in Oxfordshire. He died there on 9 November 2023, at the age of 95.
His father was Sir James Wilson Robertson.
Recurring themes of his work
- Basic Income
- Citizen's income
- Ecological consciousness
- Economic justice
- Feminism
- Globalisation
- Land value tax
- Local self-reliance
- Monetary reform, system of money and finance
- Economics of local recovery
- Patterns of change
- Sane alternative
- Social investment
- Social justice
- Voluntary simplicity