Background
Pełczyński was born in Grodzisk Mazowiecki, Poland.
Pełczyński was born in Grodzisk Mazowiecki, Poland.
After the war Pełczyński settled in Britain, where he attended Saint Andrews University in Scotland. In 1956, he completed his Doctorate.Phil.
He is an Emeritus Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford, where he taught politics from 1957 to 1992. He has been instrumental in providing opportunities for qualified scholars from Poland and other post-communist countries to study at British universities, especially at Oxford and Cambridge. He fought in the 1944 Warsaw Uprising and was taken prisoner by the Germans. thesis at Oxford University on Hegel"s minor political works.
After 1956, Pełczyński made regular visits to Poland and was instrumental in developing several programmes for the education of students from communist Europe at Oxford.
In 1982, he was instrumental in establishing a scholarship program for Polish students at Oxford. Then in 1986, through collaboration with the Hungarian-American philanthropist George Soros, who had earlier established the Open Society Foundation, scholarships became available for Hungarian students at Oxford and the Stefan Batory Foundation was established in Poland.
The programme widened with participation from Cambridge University, Manchester University, and other British universities. In the United States, Pełczyński became well known for having been the politics tutor at Oxford University for the Rhodes Scholar and future President Bill Clinton.
Other famous students include prime minister of Hungary Viktor Orbán, former Polish Minister of Foreign Affairs Radek Sikorski and journalist and biographer Walter Isaacson.
In 1990s Pełczyński was advising the Constitutional Committee of the Polish Sejm (lower chamber of the parliament), which was working on the new Constitution of the Republic of Poland. He was consulting the European Economic Union and the Organization of European Cooperation and Development on government reforms and public administration in Poland. In 1994 Pełczyński founded the School for Young Social and Political Leaders in Warsaw.
The organization, which subsequently changed its name to the School for Leaders Society, states as one of its goals "creating social capital based on leadership".
Pełczyński is an honorary member of the Polish academic society Collegium Invisibile, a prestigious institution that offers tuition for outstanding Polish students. He was an advisor to the Chief of the Chancellery of the Prime Minister of Poland on government institutional reforms and was a member of Prime Minister"s Council on the education of civil servants.