Stephen Taylor (baron Taylor)
Stephen James Lake Taylor, Baron Taylor de Harlow (SJL Taylor), né le à High Wycombe et mort le à Wrexham est un médecin, éducateur et homme politique britannique.
Membre de la Chambre des lords | |
---|---|
- | |
Membre du 38e Parlement du Royaume-Uni 38e Parlement du Royaume-Uni (d) Barnet (en) | |
- |
Naissance | |
---|---|
Décès | |
Nationalité | |
Formation | |
Activités |
Parti politique | |
---|---|
Distinction |
Fellow of the Royal College of General Practitioners (d) |
Il est diplômé en médecine du St Thomas' Hospital en 1935, mais pratiquera peu cette profession, préférant se tourner vers la politique[1]. En 1938, il signe un article remarqué dans le journal The Lancet, relatant son expérience de la pratique psychiatrique auprès des femmes au foyer dans les banlieues anglaises, sous le titre « The suburban neurosis » (la névrose des banlieues)[2].
Texte anglais à traduire :
From 1940 to 1944 he was Director of Home intelligence and the Wartime Social Survey in the Ministry of Information, and Labour Member of Parliament for Barnet from 1945 to 1950. He was Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Deputy Prime Minister and Lord President of the Council from 1947 until 1950. He was a policy advisor on the National Health Service.
In 1951 he was invited by the Nuffield Provincial Hospitals trust to carry out a survey of general practice[3]. He went on to make a significant contribution to the development of general practice, holding a number of positions on medical boards and other organisations[4].
In August 1958, he was created a life peer as Baron Taylor, de Harlow dans le comté d'Essex[5]. He served in government as Under-Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations and Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies from 1964 to 1966. He resigned from Labour Party in 1981 to sit with the Social Democratic Party.
Lord Taylor was also Medical Director of Harlow Industrial Health Service, and President and Vice-Chancellor of Memorial University of Newfoundland from 1967 to 1973. After he retired from this position he became visiting professor of community medicine at Memorial University of Newfoundland in Canada[6].
In 1962, he mediated the end to the Saskatchewan Doctors' Strike in Saskatchewan, Canada[7].
Taylor married Charity Clifford, a medical doctor and later Governor of Holloway Prison, in 1939[8].
Œuvres
modifier- A Natural History of Everyday Life. A biographical guide of would-be doctors of society, 1940
- Shadows in the Sun: the Story of the Fight Against Tropical Diseases (avec Phyllis Gadsden), 1949
- First Aid in the Factory and on the Building Site and Farm, in the Shop, Office and Warehouse, 1961
- Mental Health and Environment (avec Sidney Chave), 1964
Références
modifier- (en) James Hinton, The mass observers : A History, 1937-1949, Oxford, Oxford University Press, , 424 p. (ISBN 978-0-19-165061-1, lire en ligne), p. 180
- (en) John Fry, « A natural history of everyday life. A biographical guide for would-be doctors of society », J R Coll Gen Pract, vol. 39, no 322, , p. 222 (lire en ligne, consulté le )
- (en) Stephen Taylor, « The suburban neurosis », Lancet,
- (en) « RCP London, Lives of the Fellows: Lord Stephen James Lake Taylor », RCPLondon (consulté le )
- (en) « Stephen James Lake Taylor, Lord Taylor of Harlow (1910-1988) », Houses of Parliament (consulté le )
- (en) The London Gazette, no 41467, p. 4930, 8 août 1958. Consulté le 2009-05-29.
- (en) « Lord Stephen Taylor of Harlow », Memorial University (consulté le )
- (en) « Lord Taylor of Harlow collection », Memorial University (consulté le )
- (en) Daniel Yates, « Obituary: Lady Taylor », The Independent, (consulté le )
Liens externes
modifier- Ressources relatives à la vie publique :
- Ressources relatives aux beaux-arts :
- Ressource relative à la recherche :
- Notice dans un dictionnaire ou une encyclopédie généraliste :
- (en) Birth date & MP history