Bas de Gaay Fortman

Bastiaan "Bas" de Gaay Fortman (born 6 November 1937) is a retired Dutch politician and diplomat of the Political Party of Radicals (PPR) and later the GreenLeft (GL) party and economist.

Career before politics
After attending public elementary education, he attended the Christian Gymnasium in the Hague, specialising in sciences. After graduating in 1956 he studied law and economics at the Free University of Amsterdam, receiving his Master of Law, and Doctorandus in Economy in 1963 cum laude. In the last four years of his study he taught Civil Law, Commercial Law and Political Economics. Following graduation he became a fellow at the Social Faculty of the Free University, and wrote his dissertation in Economics. During this period he taught macro- and micro-economic theory. In 1966, he received his Ph.D. in Economics for his dissertation "Theory of competition policy".

In 1967, De Gaay Fortman left Amsterdam to become a senior lector at the University of Zambia in Lusaka, where he was head of the Economic faculty. Here he taught Economics of Rural Development, and Theory of the Economic Order. In 1968, he was appointed Chairman of the Agricultural Prices and Marketing Committee, an advisory Body of the Zambian government. He wrote two books about his residence in Zambia: After Mulungushi: The Economics of Zambian Humanism in 1967 and The Third World in Movement, a message from Zambia in 1972.

While in Zambia, De Gaay Fortman kept close tabs on the developments in Dutch politics. De Gaay Fortman was a member of the Christian-democratic Anti-Revolutionary Party. In 1970, he joined a group of so-called "spijtstemmers" (English: "the Sorry Voters") or Americain Group (after restaurant Americain, where the group regularly met). The group regretted that their party, ARP, joined a coalition with the liberal VVD instead of the social-democratic Partij van de Arbeid. In 1967, he edited the book Christian-Radical, in which a new left-wing Christian faith was articulated. In 1970, he left the ARP to join the PPR, a Christian-radical party set up by former members of the KVP, who also regretted the Christian-democratic/liberal coalition.

Political career
In 1971, De Gaay Fortman returned to the Netherlands from Zambia for the election campaign of the PPR. He was one of the two top candidates of the party. In the elections the party got two seats in the House of Representatives, one of which was to be occupied by De Gaay-Fortman. During his period as member of the House of Representatives, he was Professor Extraordinary of Economic Development at the Institute of Social Studies in the Hague. After the election he became Shadow Minister for International Development in Den Uyl's Shadow cabinet. He led the party in the 1972 elections, in which the PPR more than tripled its seats to seven. De Gaay Fortman became the leader of the parliamentary party. Between 1973 and 1975 he was vice-chair of the Defence Committee of the House of Representatives.

He seemed an atypical PPR-member, well-educated, upper-class, and with his affected speech. De Gaay however, was very popular under young people. In parliament he showed a keen interest in development cooperation.

Career after politics
Before 1977 elections the younger Ria Beckers succeeded De Gaay Fortman. De Gaay Fortman became a member of the Senate. He kept this position until 1991. During this entire period he was the party's leader in the Senate. After 1981, however, his party was a one-man party. In 1989, his party, the PPR merged with the PSP, CPN and the EVP to become GroenLinks. De Gaay Fortman remained senator for this party.

During this period De Gaay Fortman returned to his passion, science. He was professor of Political Economy at the Institute for Social Studies between 1977 and 2002. He also held many positions in the World of Development Cooperation: most importantly he was president of NOVIB, the Dutch branch of Oxfam, between 1977 and 1984. In 1990, he gave up his seat in the House of Representatives to become delegate for the Reformed Church at the Assembly of the World Council of Churches in Canberra. In 1990, he also founded Economists for Peace, with the late Jan Tinbergen.

After 1991 Bas de Gaay Fortman has held numerous research positions: from 1991 to 1993 he was the director of research for the Institute for Social Studies. Here he taught Political Economy of Jurisprudence, Transition and Development. In 1992, he served as the chair of the Joint Steering Committee of the Netherlands Israeli Palestinian Research Programme (NIRP). From 1992 to 1998, he was a researcher in both the Research School for Development Studies (CERES) and the Netherlands Research School on Human Rights. From 1992 to 1993 he was the chair of the Directorate of the CERES School of Excellence in which six Dutch universities participated. Since 2000 he has been the chair of the Working Programme Formation and Disintegration of States of CERES.

De Gaay Fortman also served as correspondent in the Netherlands for several development programs, such as the United Nations Development Program and the European Commission's.

In 2002 he became professor of Political Economy of Human Rights at the University of Utrecht. He is the only chair in Political Economy of Human Rights in the world. Until 2005, he taught his trademark class "Political Economy of Human Rights", which was part of the Master in Conflict Studies at University of Utrecht. In this class, the majority of the readings used are his own unpublished works. In 2002 he also became a member of the permanent committee for Development Cooperation of the Advisory Council for International Questions of the Minister of Foreign Affairs. Since 2003 he has been the vice-president of the Prins Claus Chair of the University of Utrecht and the ISS. From 2003 to 2004 he was the Msgr Willy Onclin Professor of Comparative Canon Law at the Catholic University of Louvain.

His research interests focus on the political economy of law, human rights and jurisprudence and political economy of conflict and collective violence.

De Gaay Fortman has written and edited many books on Development Cooperation and many other subjects including: Help we're developed in 1978, The Art of Ivory turning in 1979, New Progress in 1984, The Small path between Power and Morale in 1989, Internal Conflicts, Security and Development in 1997, ''God and Goods. Global Economy in a Civilizational Perspective in 1998, Globalization and Its New Divides: Malcontents, Recipes and Reform in 2003, and From Warfare to Welfare. Human Security in a Southern African Context'' in 2004.

Political views
As a devoted human rights activist, De Gaay Fortman has championed the idea that every human being has human dignity which is meant to convey an idea of absolute and inherent worth. He outlined the necessary preconditions for broad respect of human dignity through his "Golden Triangle of Human Dignity". Each corner of the triangle houses one of the three manifestations of human dignity: human security, human rights, and human development.

Miscellaneous facts

 * De Gaay Fortman adheres to the reformed religion;
 * He is a member of the de Gaay Fortman family. His father was Gaius de Gaay Fortman, a prominent Dutch politician. Coincidentally, his father served as Minister of Home Affairs, while B. de Gaay Fortman served as member of the House of Representatives. After 1977 both W. F. and B. de Gaay Fortman served as members of the Senate together, but representing different political parties;
 * De Gaay Fortman speaks fluent Dutch, French, English, German, Chewa, Spanish and Afrikaans;
 * De Gaay Fortman is a well travelled man. As a member of parliament, international observer, researcher or visiting professor, he has visited a lot of countries in South America, Africa and Asia focusing on Zambia and Malawi.

Quotes

 * "The Melians, however, do not accept, trusting in the justice of their cause and hoping for the help of the Gods and the Spartans." −2001 unpublished essay on Laborious Law
 * "Violations of basic human rights affect the overall quality of life." −1999 unpublished work "Where Needs Meet Rights," p. 10
 * "The lack of a socio-economic perspective, as a result of poverty and exclusion, may be seen as a major factor contributing to intrastate violence" – From his work on the human security gap, "The Golden Triangle of Human Dignity: Human Security, Human Development, and Human Rights."
 * "Human rights, then, is to be seen as a laborious, but not impossible, venture and from a civilizational perspective a crucial challenge in our world today." – 2001 unpublished essay on Laborious Law