Mary Kaldor


Mary Henrietta Kaldor CBE is a British academic, currently Professor of Global Governance at the London School of Economics, where she is also the Director of the Civil Society and Human Security Research Unit. She has been a key figure in the development of cosmopolitan democracy. She writes on globalisation, international relations and humanitarian intervention, global civil society and global governance, as well as what she calls New Wars.

Career

In 1981, Kaldor was a member of the anti-nuclear Labour Party Defence Study Group. She was a founding member of European Nuclear Disarmament, editing its European Nuclear Disarmament Journal. She was the founder and Co-Chair of the Helsinki Citizens Assembly, and a founding member of the European Council on Foreign Relations. She also writes for OpenDemocracy.net, belongs to the Board of Trustees of the Hertie School of Governance, and is on the Editorial Board of . She is known to admire the Wentworth Group of Concerned Scientists.
In 1999, Kaldor supported international military intervention over Kosovo on humanitarian grounds, calling for NATO ground forces to follow aerial bombardment in an article for The Guardian. However, Kaldor had lost faith in humanitarian intervention by 2009, telling the same paper: "The international community makes a terrible mess wherever it goes":
It is hard to find a single example of humanitarian intervention during the 1990s that can be unequivocally declared a success. Especially after Kosovo, the debate about whether human rights can be enforced through military means is ever more intense. Moreover, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, which have been justified in humanitarian terms, have further called into question the case for intervention.

These views were repeated in her 2013 book Human Security.

Family

She is the daughter of the economist Nicholas Kaldor and Clarissa Goldschmidt, a history graduate from Somerville College, Oxford. She is also the sister of Frances Stewart, Professor at the Oxford Department of International Development, University of Oxford. The family moved to west Cambridge in 1950. Kaldor began her career with a B.A. in philosophy, politics and economics from Oxford University.. In 2008, she married Julian Perry Robinson, Chemist and Lawyer, who died 22 April 2020. They had two sons.

Selected bibliography

Books

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