Adam Curle

Adam Curle
Born
Charles Thomas William Curle

(1916-07-04)4 July 1916
Died28 September 2006(2006-09-28) (aged 90)
London, England
NationalityBritish
Spouses
Pamela Hobson
(m. 1939, divorced)
    Anne Edie
    (m. 1958)
    Parent(s)Richard Curle and Cordelia Curle
    AwardsGandhi International Peace Award (2006)
    Academic background
    EducationCharterhouse School
    New College, Oxford
    Exeter College, Oxford
    InfluencesPaulo Freire, George Gurdjieff, P. D. Ouspensky, Buddhist philosophy (especially Tibetan Buddhism and Vajrayana), Sufism, Quaker thought
    Academic work
    DisciplineSocial psychology, pedagogy, development studies, peace studies
    InstitutionsTavistock Institute of Human Relations
    University of Oxford
    University of Exeter
    University of Ghana
    Harvard University
    University of Bradford
    Notable worksEducational Strategy for Developing Societies (1963), Making Peace (1971)
    InfluencedJohn Paul Lederach

    Charles Thomas William Curle (4 July 1916 – 28 September 2006), better known as Adam Curle, was a British academic, known for his work in social psychology, pedagogy, development studies and peace studies. After holding posts at the University of Oxford, University of Exeter, University of Ghana and Harvard University, in 1973 he became the inaugural Professor of Peace Studies at the University of Bradford, following the establishment of the University's Department of Peace Studies. Curle's works included several books on education, including Educational Strategy for Developing Societies (1963), and a number of books on peace and peacemaking, including Making Peace (1971). He was also, throughout his career and after his retirement in 1978, active in peacemaking and mediation, and visited Nigeria and Biafra several times as part of a Quaker contingent during the Nigerian Civil War of 1967–70.