Holborn
London
UK
It is frequently argued that liberalism as a set of political ideas arose out of the 16th and 17th century wars of religion that culminated in the Peace of Westphalia. Does liberalism provide a way of dealing with contested doctrines and, if it does, is this bought at what from a religious point of view may be seen as too high a cost, that is by turning religion into a set of private beliefs which should have no place in the public realm. Many religious believers dispute this, insisting that their beliefs have an intrinsic social and public dimension. If this is so then such religious beliefs pose a central challenge to liberal political and legal thought.
Lord Plant has been Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Philosophy at King’s College London since 2002 and he has been a Member of the House of Lords since 1992.
Prior to his position at the Dickson Poon School of Law at King’s College London, Lord Plant was Master of St. Catherine’s College Oxford from 1994 to 2000, and Professor of European Political Thought at the University of Southampton prior to that.
His academic interests focus on political, social and legal philosophy. He is probably best known for his work on conceptual issues to do with welfare, particularly ideas such as needs, rights, obligations and community, as well as his work on Hegel as a political, social and legal philosopher. He has published and lectured widely on the role of religion in the context of a modern state, society and economy. Recent positions and lectures delivered in this area include: Stanton Lecturer in the Philosophy of Religion at the University of Cambridge, the Sarum Lectures and the Bampton Lectures in Theology at the University of Oxford, the Fergusson Lectures in Theology at the University of Manchester and the Scott Holland Lectures at Manchester Cathedral. He recently gave three lectures on theology and the public sphere at Westminster Abbey. He is an Honorary Professor in Religious Studies at the University of Winchester and Visiting Professor of Legal Philosophy in the Law School at Tallinn in Estonia.
At the House of Lords he was a member of the Joint Committee on Human Rights and has been a member of the Law and Institutions Committee of the Committee on the European Communities. He is currently on the Delegated Legislation Scrutiny Committee. He has held the positions of Opposition Spokesperson for Home Affairs (between 1992 and 1996) and the Chair of the Labour Party Commission on Electoral Systems (between 1991 and 1993). He has been President for five years of the National Council of Voluntary Organisations (NCVO) and for a period was Chair of Centrepoint the London charity for homeless young people. He wrote a fortnightly column for The Times from 1988 and has written regularly for the Diario Economica in Lisbon.