The financial crisis of 2007-2008 severely disrupted the hegemony of neoliberalism. This article argues that since the establishment of the Coalition Government in 2010, a trend has become discernible within public opinion towards a new consensus on the size of the state, the role of markets and the function of civil society. This consensus constitutes a distinctive British centrist ideology, termed New Centrism. The article examines the methodological and ideological backdrop to New Centrism, considering the particular features of British party competition, rival critiques of the crisis and an ontology of the old neoliberal settlement. The article also assesses consensus in contemporary British politics and situates the rebirth of centrism...
The central aim of the thesis is to investigate the myriad ideological 'thought-practices' of Camero...
The Conservative Party has in the 2015 British general elections won an absolute majority under Davi...
Prior to the leadership of Margaret Thatcher, traditional academic assumptions about the British Con...
The financial crisis of 2007-2008 severely disrupted the hegemony of neoliberalism. This article arg...
The neoliberal settlement has been comprehensively destabilised by the 2007 financial crisis, the im...
The late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries are commonly characterised as an age of ‘neolibe...
Since the 1980s, Britain's two largest political parties have been converging ever closer on the pol...
This article investigates the emergence of neo-liberalism in Britain and its intellectual relationsh...
Why has the financial crisis not led to more radical public contestation and political reforms? In i...
For those who study British politics from a contemporary history or political science perspective th...
Why has the financial crisis not led to more radical public contestation and political reforms? In i...
Using political claims analysis on 1,000 articles from five national newspapers (Daily Mail, The Sun...
Divided into three sections, the chapter commences by discussing how, and from where or whom, the id...
Using political claims analysis on 1,000 articles from five national newspapers (Daily Mail, The Sun...
British Party Politics and Ideology after New Labour provides the most comprehensive analysis of con...
The central aim of the thesis is to investigate the myriad ideological 'thought-practices' of Camero...
The Conservative Party has in the 2015 British general elections won an absolute majority under Davi...
Prior to the leadership of Margaret Thatcher, traditional academic assumptions about the British Con...
The financial crisis of 2007-2008 severely disrupted the hegemony of neoliberalism. This article arg...
The neoliberal settlement has been comprehensively destabilised by the 2007 financial crisis, the im...
The late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries are commonly characterised as an age of ‘neolibe...
Since the 1980s, Britain's two largest political parties have been converging ever closer on the pol...
This article investigates the emergence of neo-liberalism in Britain and its intellectual relationsh...
Why has the financial crisis not led to more radical public contestation and political reforms? In i...
For those who study British politics from a contemporary history or political science perspective th...
Why has the financial crisis not led to more radical public contestation and political reforms? In i...
Using political claims analysis on 1,000 articles from five national newspapers (Daily Mail, The Sun...
Divided into three sections, the chapter commences by discussing how, and from where or whom, the id...
Using political claims analysis on 1,000 articles from five national newspapers (Daily Mail, The Sun...
British Party Politics and Ideology after New Labour provides the most comprehensive analysis of con...
The central aim of the thesis is to investigate the myriad ideological 'thought-practices' of Camero...
The Conservative Party has in the 2015 British general elections won an absolute majority under Davi...
Prior to the leadership of Margaret Thatcher, traditional academic assumptions about the British Con...