Perri 6

British sociologist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Perri 6 is a British social scientist. He changed his name from David Ashworth to Perri 6 in 1983. Whilst not an academic at the time, many years later he said he was amused by the notion of "6, P" appearing in academic papers.[1]

Born
David Ashworth
InstitutionsDemos
Main interestsSocial science
Quick facts Born, Academic work ...
Perri 6
Born
David Ashworth
Academic work
InstitutionsDemos
Main interestsSocial science
Close

6 worked for Demos, a centre-left think tank with close ties to New Labour in the 1990s. Much of 6's recent research is based on the cultural theory of risk, which he refers to as "neo-Durkheimian institutional theory".[2] He has conducted government-backed research for the Information Commissioner's Office,[3] and has written on behalf of the think-tank Demos.[4] He has also contributed to the peer-reviewed Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory,[5] Social Policy and Society[6] and Public Administration.[7]

6 is currently chair in Public Management at Queen Mary University of London.[8]

Honours and awards

Selected bibliography

  • 6, Perri; Margetts, Helen; Hood, Christopher (2010). Paradoxes of modernization: unintended consequences of public policy reform. Oxford New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199573547.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • 6, Perri; Fletcher‐Morgan, Charlotte; Leyland, Kate. "Making people more responsible: the Blair Government's Programme for changing Citizens' behaviour." Political Studies 58.3 (2010): 427–449. abstract

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI