Max Roser
Max Roser | |
---|---|
Born | Kirchheimbolanden, Germany |
Institution | Nuffield College, Oxford Oxford Martin School |
Field | Economics of income distribution, poverty, global development |
Influences | Tony Atkinson, Amartya Sen, Steven Pinker, Angus Deaton |
Max Roser is an economist and media critic. He is known for his research on global trends of living conditions and his visualisations of these trends.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8] He is currently a research fellow in economics at the University of Oxford.[9][10][11]
Roser was born in Kirchheimbolanden. He travelled widely, Der Spiegel reported that he travelled the length of the Nile from the mouth to the source, and that he crossed the Himalayas and the Andes.[12] Roser graduated with degrees in geoscience, economics, and philosophy.[12]
He is critical of the mass media's excessive focus on single events which he claims is not helpful in informing the audience about the state of the world and how the world is changing.[9][13] In contrast to this event-focussed rubbernecking Roser advocates the adoption of a broader, more holistic perspective on the living conditions around the world:[13] This perspective means looking at inequality and a particular focus on those living in poverty – the focus on the upper classes, especially in historical perspective, is misleading since it is not exposing the hardship of those in the worst living conditions. Secondly, he advocates to look at larger trends in poverty, education, health and violence since these are slowly, but persistently changing the world and are neglected in the reporting of today's mass media.[13]
Roser is the author of Our World In Data, a web publication about how living conditions around the world are changing. The publication covers a wide range of aspects of development: global health, food provision, the growth and distribution of incomes, violence, rights, wars, technology, education, environmental changes, among others. The publication makes use of data visualisations which are licensed under Creative Commons and are widely used in media publications and teaching material.[14] An important aspect of this publication is that Roser points out the limits of quantitative information. The publication has had more than 1 million readers per year (September 2015).[14][15] In his advocacy of prioritising the perspective on slowly evolving structures over the media's "event history" he is following the agenda of the French Annales School with their focus on the longue durée. Roser is a regular speaker at conferences where he presents empirical data on how the world is changing.[16][17]
While his research is concerned with rising income inequality[18][19][20] he maintains that in many important aspects the world has made important progress in improving living conditions and aims to show this change by visualising the empirical evidence for these long-term trends.[21][22] Roser has said that his work is not about saying that we live in a perfect world, but that his aim is to point out the direction of change around the world.[23] Roser has said that the world's most severe problem is global poverty.[24]
Tina Rosenberg emphasised in The New York Times that Roser’s work presents a “big picture that’s an important counterpoint to the constant barrage of negative world news”. Nobel laureate Angus Deaton cites Roser in his book The Great Escape and Steven Pinker placed Roser’s Our World In Data on his list of his personal “cultural highlights”.[25]
References
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External links
- www.MaxRoser.com, Personal web page
- Max Roser at the Oxford Martin School
- Our World In Data – one of the web publications of Max Roser
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- ↑ Interview on the website of the University of Oxford: http://www.ox.ac.uk/research/research-in-conversation/our-place-world/max-roser
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