Daniel Barbu

Daniel-Constantin Barbu (born 21 May 1957) is a Romanian political scientist, publisher, essayist, journalist, and professor at the University of Bucharest's Faculty of Political Science. The head of the Research Institute at the University of Bucharest, and former dean of the Faculty, he was also director of Realitatea Românească, a daily newspaper, in 1991–1992. Barbu worked as a State Adviser for President Emil Constantinescu between 1997 and 1999. He is the author as of June 2007 of eight books and many more articles on political science, and a contributor to the magazine Sfera Politicii. He is also a member of the Romanian Senate from Bucharest and former Minister of Culture.

Daniel Barbu
Minister of Culture
In office
21 December 2012  12 December 2013
PresidentTraian Băsescu
Prime MinisterVictor Ponta
Preceded byPuiu Hașotti
Succeeded byGigel Știrbu
Member of the Senate of Romania
In office
19 December 2012  December 2016
Constituency42-Bucharest, Electoral district no. 5
Personal details
Born (1957-05-21) 21 May 1957
Bucharest, Romania
Political partyAlianța Liberalilor și Democraților, ALDE
Alma materBucharest National University of Arts
Babeș-Bolyai University
University of Bucharest
ProfessionPolitical scientist, publisher, essayist, journalist and professor
Websitehttp://danielbarbu.eu/

Biography

Early years

Barbu was born in Bucharest, and graduated from the Nicolae Bălcescu High School (the present-day Saint Sava National College) in 1976. In 1976, the Union of Communist Youth, official youth organization in Communist Romania, refused to grant him permission to attend either the Faculty of History-Philosophy or that of Law. Consequently, Barbu attended Art History in Cluj-Napoca, at the present-day Babeş-Bolyai University, graduating in 1980. He then was employed as a curator at the Village Museum (1980) and the National Museum of Romanian History (1981–1986). Between 1987 and 1992, he was a researcher at Bucharest University's Institute of South-Eastern European Studies.

Post-1989

After the Romanian Revolution of 1989, he took doctoral training in Germany, at the University of Fribourg's Faculty of Theology; he received a PhD in history from the Babeş-Bolyai University in 1991. In 1999, he took a second doctorate, in Philosophy, from the University of Bucharest, where he has been teaching since 1991.

Between 1990 and 1991, he was head of Editura Meridiane, a prestigious Bucharest-based publishing house.

Barbu was the Dean of the Political Science Department of the University of Bucharest from 1994 to 2000, and then again from 2002 to 2004. Since 2004, he has been the Political Science Chair of the Political Science Department of the University of Bucharest.

He has been a visiting Professor at the École des hautes études en sciences sociales in Paris, the La Sapienza University in Rome, the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Pittsburg State University, Jackson State University, and many others.

Barbu has specialized in the Comparative History of European Civilizations, Political Science and Comparative Political Science, Social and Political Models of the State, Minorities and Confessional Groups in Romania, Constitutions, Government, and Politics in Europe, Totalitarian Regimes, Communisme et Socialisme d'État, and Political Anthropology.

In 2004, the European Anti-fraud Office (OLAF) notified the Romanian Government about irregularities found in a Phare programme headed by Daniel Barbu, as dean of the Faculty of Political Science. The event was reported by an article on the BBC Romanian service on 5 May[1] and appeared in the Daily Bulletin of the Romanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs a day later.[2] According to both sources, the program engulfed over 200,000 euros coming from PHARE TEMPUS grant money into civil servant training courses which never took place and which had nonexistent people enrolled. In an interview during the 2012 Parliament election campaign, as candidate from the Social-Liberal Union, Daniel Barbu dubbed the event as a misunderstanding and a "no penal matter".[3] As a result of the 2012 Romanian parliamentary elections, Daniel Barbu has been designated the new Romanian Minister of Culture, ironically, by the same person who in 2004 headed the Government's Control Department, Victor Ponta, department which investigated the OLAF notifications.

Latest works

  • Die abwesende Republik [The Absent Republic], Frank & Timme, Berlin, 2009.
  • Politica pentru barbari [Politics for the Barbarians], Nemira, Bucharest, 2005.
  • Republica absentă. Politică şi societate în România postcomunistă [The Absent Republic. Politics and Society in Post-Communist Romania], 2nd edition (revisited), Nemira, Bucharest, 2004.
  • Bizanţ contra Bizanţ. Explorări în cultura politică românească [Byzantium contra Byzantium. Exploring Romanian political culture], Nemira, Bucharest, 2001 (1st ed. 1999).
  • O arheologie constituțională românească. Studii şi documente [A Romanian constitutional archeology. Studies and documents], Editura Universităţii din București, București, 2000.
  • Byzance, Rome et les Roumains. Essais sur la production politique de la foi au Moyen Âge [Byzantium, Rome, and the Romanians. Essays on the political production of faith in the Middle Ages], Éditions Babel, Bucarest, 1998.
  • Şapte teme de politică românească [Seven Themes of Romanian Politics], Antet, Bucharest, 1997.
  • Au cetăţenii suflet? O teologie politică a societăţilor post-seculare, Editura Vremea, București, 2016.

References

  1. Rus, Mirela (5 May 2004). "Nereguli în derularea unui program PHARE". BBC Romania. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  2. "Serious Irregularities Found in Phare-funded Program". Daily Bulletin of the Romanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Romanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  3. B1 (2 November 2012). "Daniel Barbu, candidat USL la alegeri: "Neregulile de care am fost acuzat privind fondurile Phare, doar o neînțelegere. Era și Victor Ponta mai tânăr pe atunci"". B1 TV. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
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