Professor Richard Sean Grayson (born 18 April 1969 in
Hemel Hempstead)[1] is a British historian. He is currently the Head of School of Education, Humanities and Languages at
Oxford Brookes University.[2]
Grayson is involved in a number of First World War centenary projects. He is the chair of the Academy Advisory Group for the digital projects run by the Imperial War Museums,[7] including Operation War Diary[8] and Lives of the First World War.[9][failed verification] He is an Associate Member of the First World War Centenary Committee in Northern Ireland and contributed to the two-part Ireland’s Great War first broadcast on BBC 1 Northern Ireland in February 2015.[10][11] He co-edits the IrelandWW1 website[12] and is involved in the Living Legacies 1914-1918 First World War Engagement Centre.[13] Work as part of this has included leading a walking tour of West Belfast around sites connected with First World War veterans.[14]
Political activities
Labour Party (since 2013)
Grayson joined the
Labour Party in September 2013.[15] Later that year he co-authored with
Dan Jarvis an article about commemoration of the First World War arguing that Britain needs to ‘emerge from 2014-18 having not only paid tribute to sacrifice, but also remembering survivors and service, and more accurately understanding the true significance of the Great War.’ During the 2015 general election Grayson actively supported Labour candidates in Hemel Hempstead,[16] St Albans[17] and Watford.[18] In the
2015 Labour leadership election Grayson declared support for
Yvette Cooper[19] and for
Caroline Flint as deputy.[20] In November 2015 he was elected to the executive of Hemel Hempstead Constituency Labour Party.[21]
Public policy and political commentary
His work on public policy includes an edited volume on social liberalism co-edited with
David Howarth and Duncan Brack and including contributions from
Chris Huhne,
Matthew Taylor,
Nick Clegg and
Steve Webb. In 2002 he co-wrote a pamphlet with
Nick Clegg on secondary education systems, based on research in the
Netherlands,
Denmark and
Sweden.[22] The pamphlet recommended the policy which became the ‘pupil premium’ included in the 2010
coalition agreement.[23] With Jonathan Rutherford he co-edited After the Crash: Reinventing the Left in Britain[24] which included chapters from
Jon Cruddas,
Caroline Lucas and
Steve Webb. He has published an article on public policy in Newark, New Jersey, examining the work of Mayor
Cory Booker, a friend from his time studying at Oxford.[25] He has commentated on politics for both The Independent and The Guardian (see ‘Political Commentary’ section below) and appeared on
Any Questions[26] and was the only member of the panel to reach the venue on time when Any Questions? was cancelled for the first time in its history in April 2011.[27] He has blogged for the Huffington Post having written on subjects from politics and history to his support for
Queens Park Rangers F.C.[28]
Liberal Democrats (1988–2013)
Grayson was involved in the
Liberal Democrats at several levels of the party between 1988 and 2013 when he left, joining Labour shortly afterwards. He was the party’s National Youth and Student Officer in 1991–92, Director of the Centre for Reform (now called
CentreForum) in 1998–99, and was Director of Policy of the Liberal Democrats in 1999–2004. That role also included spending two years as
Charles Kennedy’s speechwriter.[29] He was the party’s parliamentary candidate for
Hemel Hempstead constituency in the 2005 and 2010 general elections, gaining 4.4% and 6% increases in the vote to move into second place.[30][31] In 2008 he was listed as 48th on the Daily Telegraph’s list of the 50 most influential Liberal Democrats[32] and in 2009 was placed in 39th.[33] He was Vice-Chair of the Liberal Democrat Federal
Policy Committee in 2008–2010[34] and was a critic of the
coalition between the
Conservative Party and the Liberal Democrats. In particular, he argued that ‘The Liberal Democrat leadership believed in "savage cuts" long before they entered government’, that they have ‘no electoral mandate’ for parts of the 2010 Budget and that ‘Liberal Democrats may soon realise that a centre-left party is being led from the centre-right.’[35][36] This argument was cited in several newspapers, and was developed in longer pieces for Compass and the
New Statesman.[37][38][39]
In December 2010 he urged Liberal Democrat members to seize the opportunity of Ed Miliband's leadership by engaging in dialogue with Labour.[40] Following that, he was invited by Ed Miliband to contribute to Labour's policy review and he accepted the invitation.[41][42] However, he remained a member of the Liberal Democrat 'Facing the Future' policy review, which reported in July 2011.[43] Grayson left the
Liberal Democrats in 2013[44] and has since joined the
Labour Party.[45]
Cricket
Grayson is Chairperson of Hemel Hempstead Town Cricket Club.[46] His main Twitter account is @ProfRSGrayson[47] but he also Tweets on inter-war cricket history as @InterWarCricket.[48]
Main publications
(editor), The First World War Diary of Noël Drury, 6th Royal Dublin Fusiliers: Gallipoli, Salonika, the Middle East and the Western Front (London: The
Army Records Society, 2022)
(editor with
Fearghal McGarry), Remembering 1916: The Easter Rising, the Somme and the Politics of Memory in Ireland (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016)
At War with the 16th Irish Division 1914-1918: The Letters of J H M Staniforth (London: Pen & Sword Military, 2012)
British Politics: A Beginner's Guide (Oxford: One World, 2010)[49]
(Co-editor with Jonathan Rutherford), After the Crash: Reinventing the Left in Britain (London: Lawrence & Wishart, 2010).[50]