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The New Labour Reader A Chadwick

The New Labour Reader By A Chadwick

The New Labour Reader by A Chadwick


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Summary

Brings together, in one accessible volume, a set of authoritative interpretations and accounts of New Labour in government. Maps out and explains New Laboura s political trajectory, the policy agenda it has pursued and the process by which it governs.

The New Labour Reader Summary

The New Labour Reader by A Chadwick

The New Labour Reader draws together in one accessible volume a set of authoritative interpretations and accounts of New Labour in government, including key commentaries on the contemporary Labour Party and the Blair government. Using a variety of primary and secondary sources, the book maps out and explains New Laboura s political trajectory, the policy agenda it has pursued and the process by which it governs. It uses excerpts from the best and most interesting material, including the writings and speeches of the Labour governmenta s most influential figures. There are chapters on the New Labour debate, economic policy, the public services, constitutional reform, European policy and Laboura s Whitehall style, as well as a critical introduction by the editors. This Reader will provide an initial point of access to the varied literature on this subject and prove an essential reference for understanding the wide--ranging implications of the New Labour a projecta . Since British politics is a core option on all undergraduate politics courses, it will be a vital resource for all who study the subject. Visit www.polity.co.uk/newlabour for articles and updates which support the book.

The New Labour Reader Reviews

'There is a rapidly swelling literature on New Labour, so this handy compilation of key contributions is extremely welcome. It affords valuable insights into the nature of the current debate -- a must for all students of the contemporary Labour party.' -- Eric Shaw, University of Stirling 'New Labour has many roots and has had many attempted rationalizations since 1994. For the first time, the debate about what New Labour means has been brought under the same covers in a comprehensive collection of both explanations and analyses -- showing not only its diversity, but also a largely unappreciated consistency in its central strategy.' -- Peter Riddell, The Times

About A Chadwick

Andrew Chadwick is a Lecturer in Political Science at Royal Holloway, University of London. His previous publications include Augmenting Democracy: Political Movements and Constitutional Reform During The Rise of Labour, and he has published a number of articles in several scholarly journals Richard Heffernan is a Lecturer in Government and Politics at The Open University. His publications include New Labour and Thatcherism: Political Change in Britain, The Labour Party: A Centenary History (edited with Brian Brivati), and Defeat From the Jaws of Victory: Inside Kinnocka s Labour Party (with Mike Marqusee).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements. Publishera s Note. Introduction: The New Labour Phenomenon. Part I: The New Labour Debate. 1. The Third Way: New Politics for the New Century (Tony Blair). 2. The Third Way: The Renewal of Social Democracy (Anthony Giddens). 3. The Land that Labour Forgot (Philip Gould). 4. The Ideology of New Labour (Michael Freeden). 5. New Labour and Thatcherism (Richard Heffernan). 6. The Political Economy of New Labour (Colin Hay). 7. Interpreting New labour: Constraints, Dilemmas and Political Agency (Michael Kenny and Martin J. Smith). 8. The Blair Paradox (David Marquand). 9. The Great Moving Newhere Show (Stuart Hall). 10. Corporate Populism and Partyless Democracy (Anthony Barnett). Part II: Prudent for a Purpose? New Laboura s Economic Policy. 11. Safety First: The Making of New Labour (Paul Anderson and Nyta Mann). 12. Laboura s Business Manifesto: Equipping Britain for the Future (The Labour Party). 13. Prudence will be our Watchworda : Chancellora s Speech at the Mansion House, 1998 (Gordon Brown). 14. Open Macroeconomics in an Open Economy (Edeard Balls). 15. Europe: the Third Way/Die Neue Mitte (Tony Blair and Gerhard Schroder). 16. New Keynesianism and New Labour (Will Hutton). 17. Presidenta s Speech to the TUC Congress, September 2001 (Bill Morris). 18. Did Things Get Better? An Audit of Laboura s Successes and Failures (Polly Toynbee and David Walker). Part III: realizing Citizenship? Labour and Public Services. 19. The Third Way: New Politics for the New Century (Tony Blair). 20. Equality -- Then and Now. 21. The Third Way Begins with CORA (Julian Le Grand). 22. Government Must Reconsider its Strategy for More Equal Society (Ruth Lister and Others). 23. Bringing Britain Together: A National Strategy for Neighbourhood Renewal (Cabinet Office Social Exclusion Unit). 24. Excellence in Schools (Department for Education and Employment). 25. the New NHS: Modern, Dependable (Department of Health). 26. How big Money is Stitching Up the NHS (Will Hutton). 27. New Labour: Politics after Thatcherism (Stephen Driver and Luke Martell). 28. From Welfare State to Post--Welfare Society? Laboura s Social Policy in Historical and Contemporary Perspective (Nick Ellison). Part IV: Modernizing the United Kingdom? Laboura s Constitutional Agenda. 29. Modernising Government (The Cabinet Office). 30. Foreword to Scotlanda s Parliament (Donald Dewar). 31. Human Rights Act 1998. 32. A Mayor and Assembly for London (Department of the Environment, Transport and the Regions). 33. The Jenkins Commission report on the Voting System (Jenkins Commission). 34. Response to eh Jenkins Commission report (Jack Straw). 35. The House of Lords: completing the reform (Lord Chancellora s Department). 36. The Nature of the British--Irish Agreement (Brendan Oa Leary). Part V: Britain in the World, Labour in the European Union. 37. From Hostility to a Constructive Engagementa : the Europeanisation of the Labour Party (Philip Daniels). 38. New Labour -- New Europe? (Kirsty Hughes and Edward Smith). 39. Speech at the Launch of the Britain in Europe Campaign, October 1999 (Tony balir). 40. Europe -- Superpower, not Superstate: Speech in warsaw, October 2000 (Tony Blair). 41. Speech at the Mansion House, June 2001 (Gordon Brown). 42. Statement on European Monetary Union to the House of Commons, October 1997 (Gordon Brown). 43. The Blair Government and Europe (Philip Stephens). 44. Britain in the World: Speech to The Royal Institute of International Affairs, Chatham House, January 2000 (Robin Cook). 45. The Doctrine of the International community, April 1999 (Tony Balir). Part IV: A New Whitehall Style? New Labour in Government. 46. Servants of the People: The Inside Story of New Labour (Andrew Rawnsley). 47. The British Presidency: Tony Blair and the Politics of Public Leadership (Michael Foley). 48. Tony Blair as Prime Minister (Peter Hennessy). 49. The Powers Behind the Prime Minister (Dennis Kavanagh and Anthony Seldon). 50. Tony Blair (John Rentoul). 51. Lies, damn Lies...and Political Spin (Ivor Gaber). 52. The Hand of History: New Labour, News Management and Governance (Bob Franklin). 53. Sultans of Spin: the Media and the New Labour Government (Nicholas Jones). 54. The Electronic Face of Government in the Internet Age (Andrew Chadwick). 55. The Commons: Mr. Blaira s Lapdog (Philip Cowley). Index.

Additional information

NPB9780745629445
9780745629445
074562944X
The New Labour Reader by A Chadwick
New
Paperback
Polity Press
20030505
352
N/A
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