The Progressive Tradition
Eighty Years of The Political Quarterly
Political Quarterly Special Issues
1. Auflage Mai 2011
334 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
This volume, marking the eightieth anniversary of the journal
The Political Quarterly, contains a selection of
articles from eight decades of progressive writing and provides
both a fascinating window on the past and a stimulus to thought and
action in the present.
* A free-thinking platform for the leading voices of the
progressive tradition in British politics
* Spans eight decades of progressive writing from voices which
still have something to say to us now
* Aims to bridge the divide between thought and action and to
provide an intellectual foundation for practical reform and for
progressive politics
Preface (Andrew Gamble and Tony Wright).
1. The Founding of The Political Quarterly (William Robson).
2. The Dilemma of Modern Socialism (J. M. Keynes).
3. The Choice before the Labour Party (R. H. Tawney).
4. Economics in the Modern World (G. D. H. Cole).
5. Utopia and Reality (Leonard Woolf).
6. Notes on the Anglo-Saxon Character (Kingsley Martin).
7. A Plague on All Your Isms (Barbara Wootton).
8. The Economic Aims of the Labour Party (Hugh Gaitskell).
9. The Future of British Politics: an American View (Samuel H.
Beer).
10. Parties, Pressure Groups and the British Political Process (R.
T. McKenzie).
11. Democracy and Ideology (Bernard Williams).
12. The Woman's Vote: What Has it Achieved? (Margaret Cole).
13. The Reform of Government (William A. Robson).
14. Socialism or Social Democracy? The Choice for the Labour Party
(John P. Mackintosh).
15. The Character of a Moderate (Socialist) (Bernard Crick).
16. Democracy in the Age of Science (Anthony Wedgwood Benn).
17. Beyond Social Democracy (David Marquand).
18. Representative Democracy and Its Limits (Paul Hirst).
19. The Future of Political Biography (Ben Pimlott).
20. Modern Conservatism (David Willetts).
21. Britain in the European Union: A Way Forward (Shirley
Williams).
22. Defining British National Identity (Bhikhu Parekh).
23. State and Market: Towards a Public Interest Test (Gordon
Brown).
24. A Sovietological View of Modern Britain (Ron Amann).
25. What Will Follow the Demise of Privatised Keynesianism? (Colin
Crouch).
Index.
Queens' College in the University of Cambridge, and currently
Head of the Department of Politics and International Studies and
joint editor of The Political Quarterly. His research
interests lie in political economy, political theory and British
politics, and his books include Between Europe and America: the
future of British politics and The Spectre at the Feast:
capitalist crisis and the politics of recession. In 2005 he
received the Isaiah Berlin Prize from the Political Studies
Association for lifetime contribution to political studies.
Tony Wright is Professorial Fellow in the Department of
Politics at Birkbeck College, University of London, working on the
development of the new Centre for the Study of British Politics and
Public Life and contributing to the teaching of British Politics.
Tony was educated at LSE, Harvard and Oxford. Before being elected
to Parliament in 1992, he was Reader in British Political Thought
at the University of Birmingham, where he taught in the School of
Continuing Studies. In the House of Commons he chaired the Select
Committee on Public Administration for over a decade; and also
chaired the Select Committee on Reform of the House of Commons
which recommended major changes in how the Commons works. He stood
down from the Commons at the last election.
He is joint editor of The Political Quarterly and his
many books include GDH Cole and Socialist Democracy (1979),
Socialisms: Theories and Practices (1986), RH Tawney
(1987),Citizens and Subjects (1994), British Politics: A
Very Short Introduction (2003) and several edited volumes
including The British Political Process (2000).A collection
of his other writing is to appear shortly as Doing
Politics.