Maurice W.M. Pope (1926–2019) was educated in England at Sherborne School and Magdalene College, Cambridge. He taught classics for two decades at the University of Cape Town in South Africa before resigning his professorship and leaving the country in 1969 in protest at apartheid in academia. He then researched, taught and wrote in Oxford, Canada and the United States. Pope was a leading expert of his time in the ancient Cretan script Minoan Linear A. His critically acclaimed 1975 book The Story of Decipherment has been translated into several languages and remains in print with a 1999 update on the decrypting of the Maya script. Other books and publications dealt with teaching Latin, daily life and politics in ancient Greece, the Dutch Renaissance philosopher Erasmus, Shakespeare's medical imagination and expertise in falconry, and ground-breaking early work on juries and the principles of random selection.
""I am loving this posthumous gem of a book... strongly recommended."" -- author of Adventures in Democracy * Facebook * ""The Keys to Democracy fits perfectly into the body of research on random selection and its possible applications in politics and decision-making processes."" -- Joanna Podgorska-Rykola * Law, Economics and Sociological Movement * ""I also want to emphasize again how much I enjoyed reading this book. Pope is an interesting mind, and even the reader that still scoffs at the idea that our political systems should be more random will find things to enjoy in the boldness and ingenuity of his arguments and the breadth of his interests. And anyone who has had their cautious suggestions about the potential of sortition dismissed as ludicrous will marvel at the confidence and independent-mindedness with which Pope sets out his arguments, even the ones that ultimately fail to persuade."" -- James Kierstead * Polis *