Richard Titmuss

Richard Titmuss
Born(1907-10-16)16 October 1907
Died6 April 1973(1973-04-06) (aged 65)
NationalityBritish
SpouseKathleen Caston Miller
Scientific career
FieldsSocial policy, social work
InstitutionsLondon School of Economics

Richard Morris Titmuss CBE FBA (16 October 1907 – 6 April 1973) was a pioneering British social researcher and teacher. He founded the academic discipline of social administration (now largely known in universities as social policy) and held the founding chair in the subject at the London School of Economics.

His books and articles of the 1950s helped to define the characteristics of Britain's post World War II welfare state and of a universal welfare society, in ways that parallel the contributions of Alva Myrdal and Gunnar Myrdal in Sweden. He is honoured in the Richard Titmuss Chair in Social Policy at the LSE, which is currently held by Julian Le Grand.

Titmuss's association with eugenics extended beyond the British Eugenics Society, to encompass other personal and intellectual connections.[1]

He is also honoured by the annual Richard Titmuss Memorial Lecture in the Paul Baerwald School of Social Work at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel.

  1. ^ Chris Renwick (10 July 2019). "Richard Titmuss, Eugenics, and Social Science in Mid-twentieth-Century Britain" (PDF). The History of Sociology in Britain: 137–160. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-19929-6_5. ISBN 978-3-030-19928-9. S2CID 199244207. Titmuss' underappreciated personal and intellectual connections with the eugenics movement

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