Summary. In this article, debating societies are considered as an inherent part of the formation of a parliamentary culture in Britain. Despite the fact that the nineteenth-century Cambridge and Oxford Union Societies were considered to be ‘training grounds’ for statesmen, their debating practices have not been systematically studied in relation to national politics. This is largely due to the fact that the role of debate has remained understated in studies of parliamentary history, even though it is one of the fundamental political features in the Westminster system. Nineteenth-century parliamentary debate did not just occur for its own sake, rather it had a constitutional and political dimension that was related to procedure. This articl...
Cambridge University has been featured in a wide range of studies of the long 18th century, but few ...
During the period 1815–1848, both Britain and France were constitutional monarchies, based on heavil...
This paper demonstrated that the force of public opinion as expressed by pro-reform agitations playe...
British debating societies are here looked at a parliamentary perspective. The main emphasis is on t...
This article argues that pre-nineteenth century elections at a sub-national level have an important ...
The development in the British parliament, during the latter half of the nineteenth century, of high...
The historical development of rules of debate in the UK House of Commons raises an important puzzle:...
Largely ignored as an anomaly, the 1892 general election represents a major gap in the scholarship o...
Debating was an important part of schoolgirls' political education in late Victorian and Edwardian E...
The second reform act came at the close of a remarkable period of constitutional debate, in which se...
As part of a series of demands for political reform in Britain in the late eighteenth and early nine...
Summary: This article proposes that historians and political theorists should exploit parliamentary ...
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, debating political questions in spaces like th...
Popular Politics in Nineteenth Century England provides an accessible introduction to the culture of...
A crucial commitment of nineteenth-century French and English liberalism was to parliamentary govern...
Cambridge University has been featured in a wide range of studies of the long 18th century, but few ...
During the period 1815–1848, both Britain and France were constitutional monarchies, based on heavil...
This paper demonstrated that the force of public opinion as expressed by pro-reform agitations playe...
British debating societies are here looked at a parliamentary perspective. The main emphasis is on t...
This article argues that pre-nineteenth century elections at a sub-national level have an important ...
The development in the British parliament, during the latter half of the nineteenth century, of high...
The historical development of rules of debate in the UK House of Commons raises an important puzzle:...
Largely ignored as an anomaly, the 1892 general election represents a major gap in the scholarship o...
Debating was an important part of schoolgirls' political education in late Victorian and Edwardian E...
The second reform act came at the close of a remarkable period of constitutional debate, in which se...
As part of a series of demands for political reform in Britain in the late eighteenth and early nine...
Summary: This article proposes that historians and political theorists should exploit parliamentary ...
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, debating political questions in spaces like th...
Popular Politics in Nineteenth Century England provides an accessible introduction to the culture of...
A crucial commitment of nineteenth-century French and English liberalism was to parliamentary govern...
Cambridge University has been featured in a wide range of studies of the long 18th century, but few ...
During the period 1815–1848, both Britain and France were constitutional monarchies, based on heavil...
This paper demonstrated that the force of public opinion as expressed by pro-reform agitations playe...