The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Tributes paid to academic Prof Nick Rengger

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Tributes have been paid to a wellrespec­ted St Andrews University professor who died at the weekend.

Professor Nick Rengger, whose sudden death was announced by university principal Professor Sally Mapstone, was well known in the fields of political theory and internatio­nal relations, but also worked in history, theology, philosophy, politics and human sciences.

Prof Mapstone described her colleague as a “respected academic” and an “impressive polymath”, who embodied the values he encouraged students to embrace.

“He encouraged his students and colleagues to think beyond their comfort zone, believing that a university is a place for conversati­ons about things we hold dear and where we can disagree with civility,” she said.

“In much of his scholarshi­p and teaching Nick drew upon the work of the political philosophe­r Michael Oakeshott, who famously described human life as a conversati­on, one that stretches from the far past to the present day and which takes place both within ourselves and in public.

“While we may struggle to accept his loss, Nick’s incredibly diverse scholarshi­p will keep him very much alive in that ongoing conversati­on.”

Prof Rengger was brought up in Worthing, Sussex, alongside his brother who now lives in Canada.

He studied politics at Durham, before completing a PhD titled Reason, Scepticism and Politics: Theory and Practice in the Enlightenm­ent’s Politics also at Durham.

His academic career included jobs in Strathclyd­e, Leicester, Aberystwyt­h, and Bristol, before he came to St Andrews in 1996, initially as reader, then professor.

He dedicated years of work to enlivening internatio­nal theory, having held visiting appointmen­ts at Oxford, LSE and the University of Southern California and from 2011 to 2014 was a Global Ethics Fellow at the Carnegie Council for Ethics and Internatio­nal Affairs, New York.

He also served as head of the School of Internatio­nal Relations and numerous other positions in the school and the university more widely.

Professor Rengger is survived by his wife Vanessa and his daughters Corinna and Natalie. Details of his funeral are due to be announced by the university’s chaplaincy.

 ??  ?? Prof Rengger was well known in the fields of political theory and internatio­nal relations.
Prof Rengger was well known in the fields of political theory and internatio­nal relations.

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