Samuel Edward Finer, 1915-1993, was a political scientist and historian who was instrumental in advancing political studies as an academic subject in the United Kingdom, pioneering the study of UK political institutions. His most notable work is The History of Government from the Earliest Times — a three-volume comparative analysis of all significant government systems.
Finer went to Holloway School, where he won a scholarship to Trinity College, Oxford. He obtained a double first in modern history and modern Greats. After this, he began researching Sir Edwin Chadwick, a Benthamite civil servant. During World War II he served in the Royal Signals, where he attained the rank of captain. From 1946 to 1950, he taught politics at Balliol College, Oxford, acquiring an impressive reputation as a teacher and lecturer. From 1950 to 1966 he served as Professor of Political Institutions at the new University College of North Staffordshire (now Keele University). In 1966 he became head of the Department of Government at the University of Manchester, successfully contributing to the revival of its reputation. In 1974, he was made Gladstone Professor of Government and Administration at the Oxford University. He retired from this post in 1982, but continued writing — see History of Government below.
He has been described as a charismatic lecturer and a very effective administrator. He believed that the academic study of politics required a firm grounding in history, and was sceptical of attempts to convert the subject into a science based on such deterministic frameworks as Marxism and behavioralism.
He was chairman of the Political Studies Association of the UK from 1965 to 1969 and was a vice-president of the International Political Science Association.
Sammy Finer was a passionate liberal democrat and supporter of the causes of electoral reform and Zionism. He was twice married and had two sons. He died on 9 June 1993, aged 77, leaving a widow, Catherine.
The conceptual prologue includes a classification of government systems in terms of combinations of four elements: Palace (monarchy), Forum (democracy), Church (organised religion) and Nobility. Government is not analysed in isolation but explained in the context of economics, technology, agriculture, geography, religion, law, warfare, etc. — giving a complete picture of how a state works as a mechanism, explained in language designed to be highly accessible to a sufficiently determined general reader.
History of Government was many years in the making. It is approximately 1,700 pages long. The herculean programme of research, consultation and writing consumed Finer's retirement years 1982-93. Slowed down by heart disease including a serious heart attack in 1987, he was only able to complete 34 out of the projected 36 chapters, but the result is nevertheless a 'block-buster'. (The missing two chapters would have been on the exportation of the modern state model outside the 'West', and on the variations on the theme of modern totalitarianism.) Finer had hoped that it would be a single volume, but it was found to be impossible to reduce the material to less than the three volumes in which it was finally published. The preface to the work gives an idea of what efforts went into the project, and how it was rescued and published after the author's death.
1915 births | 1993 deaths | Political scientists | Historians
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