Alan Milward | |
|---|---|
| Born | Alan Steele Milward 19 January 1935 |
| Died | 28 September 2010(2010-09-28) (aged 75) |
| Occupations | Historian and academic |
| Spouse | Frances Lynch |
| Academic background | |
| Alma mater | University College London London School of Economics |
| Doctoral advisor | William Norton Medlicott |
| Academic work | |
| Discipline | History |
| Sub-discipline | |
| Institutions | School of Oriental and African Studies University of Edinburgh University of East Anglia Stanford University University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology European University Institute London School of Economics |
| Doctoral students | Catherine Schenk |
Alan Steele MilwardFBA (19 January 1935 – 28 September 2010) was a Britisheconomic historian specialising inWestern Europe and theUnited Kingdom in the 20th century.
One of the most influential historians of the second half of the twentieth century, Milward's work was well known in Britain, across Europe and beyond. He derived that reputation not from the writing of popular histories or media appearances but from his abilities as a linguist, economic historian, archival researcher, historical narrator and political scientist. He made an essential contribution to the understanding of modern European history and integration: the elements that went to shape contemporary Europe.[1]
Although he is usually seen as an economic historian, Milward also worked in many other fields, including economic theory and policy, political history, and contemporary economic and political studies. He was a very rigorous modern political economist.[2]
Milward was born and raised inStoke-on-Trent, where his father was an employee of the Post Office, and attended a grammar school there.
He studied medieval and modern history atUniversity College London from 1953 to 1956, gaining a First Class BA degree and then achieved his PhD at theLondon School of Economics in 1960, with a thesis written under supervision ofWilliam Norton Medlicott on the armaments industry in the German economy during the Second World War.[3]
His first academic placement was the teaching of Indian Archaeology at theSchool of Oriental and African Studies. In 1960, he was given the position of assistant lecturer and subsequently lecturer in Economic History atEdinburgh University. In 1965, he advanced to become lecturer and later senior lecturer at the School of Social Studies,University of East Anglia. He then moved to the United States to become an associate professor of economics atStanford University, returning after three years to become Professor of European Studies at theUniversity of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology between 1971 and 1983. He was then a professor at the European University Institute in Florence for two terms, between 1983 and 1986 and between 1996 and 2002.
From 1986 to 1996, he was Professor of Economic History at theLondon School of Economics.[4] In 1993, he was given the position of official historian at theCabinet Office, and he produced the first volume of the Government Official History of the United Kingdom and theEuropean Community,The Rise and Fall of a National Strategy 1945–1963, published in 2002.[5]
He was elected a fellow of theBritish Academy in 1987 and fellow of the Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters in 1994.[6]
He gained a reputation for his ability to articulate and sustain his theses, which differed considerably from the received wisdom, and to refute arguments against his position. His interpretations caused widespread debate and discussion. An example was his minimalist contention that theMarshall Plan had been less crucial than often supposed in stimulating postwar European reconstruction or persuading former antagonists to work together.
In his bookThe European Rescue of the Nation State (1992), he also challenged the eurosceptic doctrine that theEuropean Union would involve an integration of nation-states that would undermine sovereignty and lead to a federalist superstate.[7] He influenced many historians and political scientists, not least Andrew Moravcsik's Choice for Europe.[8]
He had a gift for languages, becoming fluent in Norwegian, German, Italian and French.[9]
As well as several monographs, Milward wrote reviews of a vast number of books which bore some relation to his fields of expertise, collected inAlan S. Milward and Contemporary European History: Collected Academic Reviews, eds. F. Guirao and F. Lynch (Routledge, 2015).

He died on 28 September 2010 after a three year illness and was buried on the eastern side ofHighgate Cemetery.[10]
His life's work was reviewed in depth inAlan S. Milward and a Century of European Change, eds. F. Guirao, F. Lynch, & S. M. R. Perez (Routledge, 2012).[1]
His second marriage was to Frances MB Lynch, a historian of the economies of France and Europe.
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