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Civil society tends to become a sort of artificial reservoir for an endangered species: the democratic intellectual, protected by the international institutions

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Tom Bentley

Tom Bentley is director of Demos, a London-based think tank focused on democracy. He works on a range of issues including democracy, education, institutional change and innovation. His work has been published in 14 languages, and he regularly addresses global audiences.

Prior to joining Demos, Tom Bentley worked as an advisor to the then Secretary of State for Education, David Blunkett. He has written and co-written numerous publications for Demos, including Everyday Democracy and People Flow (2005). His books include Learning Beyond the Classroom: Education for a Changing World (1998).

Tom Bentley also writes for a range of publications, including The Guardian, The Financial Times and Le Monde Diplomatique. He was educated in East London and Oxford University where he studied politics, philosophy and economics.

Recent articles


Please, not again!

Tom Bentley bangs the table. Demos, his think tank, backed by openDemocracy, got it right on one of the great issues of our time. Little good it did us… or the public across Europe.

Tall tales and home truths

Why are government and media in Britain so hostile to each other? Because each seeks to control the narratives that shape people’s lives, says Tom Bentley of the think-tank Demos. In the process, both are damaged – and so is democracy itself.

Governance as learning: the challenge of democracy

While Geoff Mulgan makes a strong case that learning has become central to effective governance, Tom Bentley registers a missing dimension in his argument: democracy itself. Learning is not just openness to international experience among policy-makers, or a better chain of command. It is a process that entails deep accountability, transparency, network-based cultures of information at every level – one that recasts relationships between governments and people.

People Flow: Migration and Europe

Does migration erode or enhance national culture? This question is highly sensitive in many European countries. The problem with the existing European approach to migration is that official distinctions between categories of migrants do not match reality. We need a new, sustainable model that recognises the evolving complexity of human mobility. In our People Flow pamphlet, openDemocracy and Demos have proposed such a model to open up debate. This article summarises its main arguments.

The immigration problem

The vast movement and mingling of peoples is a defining feature of societies in the age of globalisation. It poses huge long-term challenges. How can European policy-makers respond creatively? For a start they need ideas that look well ahead, are grounded in current realities and are tested in healthy debate. This is the aim of a collaboration between the think tank Demos, a senior and experienced Dutch civil servant Theo Veenkamp, and openDemocracy. Tom Bentley of Demos introduces the agenda that will shape our project.

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