Re-stating Social and Political ChangeOpen University Press, 1996 - 208 pages Re-Stating Social and Political Change provides a critical introduction to the social, political and cultural changes that have occurred in Britain since the war, and argues that these changes can best be understood in terms of a theory of the state. |
Contents
3 | 32 |
in postwar Britain | 42 |
towards a patriarchal welfare state? | 66 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
accumulation analysis argues Attlee Government authoritarian populism Beveridge Report Bob Jessop Britain Britain's post-war Butskellism capitalism capitalist Chapter characterized citizenship civil society conception conjunctural consider contemporary context corporatism corporatist crises crisis tendencies economic effect electorate emergent evolution full employment Gamble gang of four Habermas Hall Hall's hegemonic hegemonic project identify ideological impact incomes policy increasingly industrial initial post-war period institutions inter-war intervention Jessop Kavanagh Keynesian welfare labour legitimacy legitimation crisis London Marshall ment mobilization neo-conservatism neo-liberal notes parties patriarchal perceptions perhaps political change political rationality post-Thatcher settlement post-war Britain post-war consensus post-war reconstruction post-war settlement Poulantzas radical regime response rhetoric rolling back social and political Social Contract social rights specific state's steering problems strategy structural transformation suggest Thatcher Governments Thatcherite Thatcherite project theoretical theorists theory thesis tion Tomlinson trade unions welfare settlement Winter of Discontent women workfare
References to this book
Theorising Welfare: Enlightenment and Modern Society Martin O'Brien,Sue Penna No preview available - 1998 |