Professor
Tom Nairn is currently the Innovation Professor in Nationalism and
Cultural Diversity at the Globalism Institute at the Royal Melbourne
Institute of Technology (RMIT University), Australia. He was born
in Freuchie, Fife in 1932 and is a graduate of Philosophy from the
University of Edinburgh. After graduating he studied at Oxford,
Pisa and Dijon.
He returned
to Scotland in the early seventies to participate in the national
revival. After the defeat of the Home Rule referendum he worked
in commercial television and published The Break-up of Britain (1988).
He founded and taught at the “Nationalism Studies” course
at the University of Edinburgh’s Graduate School. He left
Scotland in 2000 to take up an invitation to teach in the School
of Social and Political Inquiry of Monash University, Melbourne.
In 2001 he moved to RMIT when the Globalisation Research Unit was
being set up. Professor Nairn’s work continues in the field
of globalisation and how the politics and culture of societies are
remaking themselves in a more unified world.
Tom Nairn is
widely known for developing in the early 1960s what would later
be named the Nairn-Anderson thesis on British decline, which is
much-cited and commented upon, and has had a definitive influence
upon studies of nationalism and politics in Britain and beyond. |