John Meisel
John Meisel was a Canadian political scientist, professor, and scholar, and chairman of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission.
Meisel wrote on various aspects of politics, notably on parties, elections, ethnic relations, politics and leisure culture, and, at the beginning of his academic career, international politics.
Meisel was a pioneer in Canada of research on electoral behaviour, political parties and the relationship between politics and leisure culture, particularly the arts. Throughout his career he examined the cohesion of the Canadian communities. He also lectured and wrote about regulation, broadcasting, telecommunications, and the information society.
Career
Meisel was born in Vienna, Austria in October 1923 to Jewish Czech parents. His father worked for Baťa Shoes at its headquarters in Zlín, Moravia, Czechoslovakia in the 1930s. As the Nazi Occupation of [Czechoslovakia (1938–1945)|occupation of Czechoslovakia] became imminent, Baťa sent its Jewish employees out of Czechoslovakia to Bata centres abroad, and the Meisel family moved to Casablanca and then Haiti before settling in Bata's Canadian company town of Batawa, Ontario in 1942.John Meisel matriculated from Pickering College in Newmarket, Ontario. He received his university training at the University of Toronto's Victoria College, and the London School of Economics. He taught at Queen's University since 1949, where he was a professor emeritus. He served on the Ontario Advisory Committee on Confederation in 1965.
Meisel worked on the 1965 Canadian National Election Study, and was a member of the ICPSR Council from 1966 to 1968.
In 1975, he was a consultant for the Trilateral Commission's report Crisis of Democracy. From 1980 to 1983 he was Chairman of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. From 1992 until 1995, he was the 103rd President of the Royal Society of Canada.
In 1989 he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada; promoted to Companion in 1999.
Meisel was the founding editor of The Canadian Journal of Political Science and of The International Political Science Review., established in 2017 by the Department of Political Studies at Queen's, is an annual lecture that honours Meisel by highlighting a scholar working on complex political issues.