This article draws from the fields of political science and of organisational studies to explore the short-term and longterm impact of New Labour’s party management on the quality of party processes as well as on party reputation. It is based on the long-term ethnographic participant observation of the Labour Party at local and regional levels, as well as national events such as annual conferences. The article starts by identifying the distinctive features of New Labour’s party management. It then examines the “unintended consequences” of this brand of party management, showing this model to be mainly self-defeating. The final section provides a general assessment of the impact of New Labour’s party management from the perspective of organi...
Jeremy Corbyn’s election as Leader of the Labour Party in 2015 stunned observers and practitioners o...
This article examines the impact of electoral results on party membership and activity. Previous stu...
This article offers a contribution to the debate in recent issues of this journal concerning the rel...
International audienceThis article draws from the fields of political science and of organisational ...
International audienceThis article shows how Lewis Minkin’s specific approach meticulously unpicks t...
The New Labour years saw sweeping cultural change designed to replace the traditional internal Labou...
International audienceWhen it comes to branding, marketing, and election victories, the revamped Bri...
The broad consequences of New Labour were that it won Labour three elections and put the party in go...
This thesis explores the merits of applying a marketing model, the product life-cycle model, to a po...
The transformation of Labour into ‘New’ Labour has been the object of many debates stressing thecont...
This Thesis examines the relationship between the organisational and ideological transformation of t...
In recent decades many European political parties have broadened the selectorate for the party leade...
The Diploma thesis "The Rise and Fall of New Labour: A Political Ideology or a Just a Trend?" focuse...
The election of Tony Blair as leader of the Labour Party in 1994 has proved to be the beginning of a...
The article examines the impact of electoral results on party membership and activity. Previous stud...
Jeremy Corbyn’s election as Leader of the Labour Party in 2015 stunned observers and practitioners o...
This article examines the impact of electoral results on party membership and activity. Previous stu...
This article offers a contribution to the debate in recent issues of this journal concerning the rel...
International audienceThis article draws from the fields of political science and of organisational ...
International audienceThis article shows how Lewis Minkin’s specific approach meticulously unpicks t...
The New Labour years saw sweeping cultural change designed to replace the traditional internal Labou...
International audienceWhen it comes to branding, marketing, and election victories, the revamped Bri...
The broad consequences of New Labour were that it won Labour three elections and put the party in go...
This thesis explores the merits of applying a marketing model, the product life-cycle model, to a po...
The transformation of Labour into ‘New’ Labour has been the object of many debates stressing thecont...
This Thesis examines the relationship between the organisational and ideological transformation of t...
In recent decades many European political parties have broadened the selectorate for the party leade...
The Diploma thesis "The Rise and Fall of New Labour: A Political Ideology or a Just a Trend?" focuse...
The election of Tony Blair as leader of the Labour Party in 1994 has proved to be the beginning of a...
The article examines the impact of electoral results on party membership and activity. Previous stud...
Jeremy Corbyn’s election as Leader of the Labour Party in 2015 stunned observers and practitioners o...
This article examines the impact of electoral results on party membership and activity. Previous stu...
This article offers a contribution to the debate in recent issues of this journal concerning the rel...