Joseph Hiam Levy (1838 – 1913) was an English author and economist. He was educated at the City of London School and joined the Civil Service. He later became a lecturer in economics at Birkbeck College and an important figure in the Personal Rights Association.
Levy also wrote an introduction to the English translation of Yves Guyot's 1893 work, The Tyranny of Socialism.
Levy was an anti-vaccinationist as he believed it violated personal rights. He described compulsory vaccination as a "gross and cruel invasion of personal liberty".[1] Levy's anti-vaccination book, The Bird that Laid the Vaccination Egg, published in 1892 was heavily criticized in medical journals as non-scientific.[2][3]
^Durbach, Nadja. (2005). Bodily Matters: The Anti-Vaccination Movement in England, 1853–1907. Duke University Press. p. 87. ISBN 978-0-8223-3423-1
^"The Bird that Laid the Vaccination Egg". The Lancet. 1: 1426–1427. 1892.
^"Recent Literature". The New England Journal of Medicine. 127: 246. 1892.
JosephHiamLevy (1838 – 1913) was an English author and economist. He was educated at the City of London School and joined the Civil Service. He later...
JosephLevy may refer to: Joseph Moses Levy (1812–1888), newspaper editor and publisher JosephHiamLevy (1838–1913), English author and economist Joseph...
New Year's Day meeting of the London Dialectical Society, founded by JosephHiamLevy to promote individualist views. It followed a noted public debate at...
century individualist anarchists such as Wordsworth Donisthorpe, JosephHiamLevy, Joseph Greevz Fisher, John Badcock, Jr., Albert Tarn, and Henry Seymour...
existed individualist anarchists such as Wordsworth Donisthorpe, JosephHiamLevy, Joseph Greevz Fisher, John Badcock Jr., Albert Tarn and Henry Albert Seymour...
Viscount Leverhulme, industrialist, philanthropist and Liberal MP 1906–09 JosephHiamLevy, author and economist Thomas Arthur Lewis, Liberal MP, 1918–23 Charles...
the Glasgow Corporation 1911 Levy, JosephHiam. Licensed Liberty. A dream of the Vaccination Act, 1898 Levy, JosephHiam. Our Duty to the Animal World...
Lloyd's of London and Lord Mayor of London 1998 & 1999[citation needed] JosephHiamLevy – Author, economist, and prominent figure in the Personal Rights Association...
and his magazine Liberty. Founding members included John Badcock, JosephHiamLevy, Greevz Fisher, Wordsworth Donisthorpe, as well as Gladys and Oswald...
alongside figures such as Auberon Herbert, Wordsworth Donisthorpe, JosephHiamLevy, and Henry Seymour. Fisher himself wrote that: The individualist creed...
by Catherine Hardwicke. The film stars Keisha Castle-Hughes, Oscar Isaac, Hiam Abbass, Shaun Toub, Alexander Siddig, Ciarán Hinds, and Shohreh Aghdashloo...
also played Naim, a young Palestinian from Gaza, whose mother was played by Hiam Abbass, opposite a young Israeli woman, Tal, played by Agathe Bonitzer, in...
McCarthy (director/screenplay); Richard Jenkins, Haaz Sleiman, Danai Gurira, Hiam Abbass, Richard Kind, Michael Cumpsty, Marian Seldes 18 Anamorph IFC Films...
Hollywood. Retrieved July 10, 2023. Vlessing, Etan (December 6, 2023). "Dan Levy Is a Bereaved Widower in 'Good Grief' Trailer". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved...
contributions in both Hebrew and Arabic cinema and theater. Mohammad Bakri, Hiam Abbass,. and Juliano Mer-Khamis have starred in Israeli film and television...
2014. "Robocop". Comingsoon.net. Retrieved November 12, 2014. McCabe, Joseph (September 23, 2013). "From the Set of Steve Pink's About Last Night". Comingsoon...
and Biographical Notices of the Quoted Authorities. Translated by Elias Hiam Lindo, pages 31–35, 37–49. London, 1842. Reprinted by, e.g., Nabu Press,...
services Benjamin Hawkins, Solicitor to the Board of Customs and Excise Fred Hiam, For public services George Anthony King Chief Master, Supreme Court Taxing...
Bill Irwin, Anna Deavere Smith, Debra Winger, Mather Zickel The Visitor Hiam Abbass, Danai Gurira, Richard Jenkins, Haaz Sleiman 2009 The Hurt Locker...
and Biographical Notices of the Quoted Authorities. Translated by Elias Hiam Lindo, pages 226–29. London, 1842. Reprinted by, e.g., Nabu Press, 2010....