Showing posts with label Alastair McIntosh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alastair McIntosh. Show all posts

2016/03/29

Alastair McIntosh - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alastair McIntosh - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Alastair McIntosh

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alastair McIntosh
AlastairMcIntosh.jpg
by Dominique Carton, Oct 2010
Born1955
EducationUniversities of Aberdeen(BSc), Edinburgh (MBA),Ulster (PhD)
OccupationWriter, academic and activist
ReligionQuaker
Spouse(s)Vérène Nicolas
Alastair McIntosh is a Scottish writer, academic and activist.
He was brought up inLeurbost on the Isle of Lewisand is married to Vérène Nicolas. He is involved with Scottish land reform especially on Eigg and campaigned successfully against the Harrissuperquarry in Lingerbay. He is a fellow of the Centre for Human Ecology, an Honorary Fellow of the Schumacher Society, and helped to set up the Govan based GalGael Trust of which he is Treasurer and a non-executive director. In 2006 he was appointed to the honorary position of Visiting Professor of Human Ecology at the University of Strathclyde (Department of Geography & Sociology)[1] - the first such post in Human ecology in a Scottish university.
Alastair also features on Nizlopi's mini album 'Extraordinary' on the track titled 'Homage To Young Men'.[2]

Education[edit]

He holds a BSc in Geography, submajoring in moral philosophy and psychology from the University of Aberdeen (1977), a financial MBA from the University of Edinburgh (1981), and in 2008 the Academy of Irish Cultural Heritages (of which he is a Visiting Fellow) at theUniversity of Ulster approved the award of PhD by Published Work based on Soil and Soul and twelve supporting publications presented with a short linking thesis, 'Some Contributions of Liberation Theology to Community Empowerment in Scottish Land Reform 1991-2003'.[3]Parts of this were published in 2008 as Schumacher Briefing No. 15: 'Rekindling Community: Connecting People, Environment and Spirituality'.

Publications[edit]

His best-known work is his 2001 book Soil and Soul: People Versus Corporate Power. In 2006 he published his collected poetry, Love and Revolution. His 2008 book on the psychology and spirituality underlyingclimate change "Hell and High Water: Climate Change, Hope and the Human Condition" was described by Michael Russell MSP, Minister for the Environment in the Scottish Government as "a profoundly important book, just as Soil and Soul was a profoundly important book."[4]

Bibliography[edit]

  • Healing Nationhood: Essays on Spirituality, Place and Community, Curlew Productions, May 2000, ISBN 1-900259-95-8
  • Soil and Soul: People versus Corporate PowerAurum Press, October 2001, ISBN 1-85410-942-1
  • Love and Revolution: Collected Poetry, Luath Press, September 2006, ISBN 1-905222-58-0
  • Hell and High Water: Climate Change, Hope and the Human ConditionBirlinn, June 2008, ISBN 1-84158-622-6
  • Rekindling Community: Connecting People, Environment and Spirituality, Green Books, September 2008, ISBN 1-900322-38-2, Alastair McIntosh and colleagues in association with WWF International and the Centre for Human Ecology
  • Spiritual Activism: Leadership as Service, by Alastair McIntosh and Matt Carmichael, Green Books (UK), September 2014, ISBN 9780857843005. Published in North America by UIT Cambridge Ltd., October 2015, ISBN 9780857843005

See also[edit]

References[edit]

External links[edit]