New Labour in government since 1997 has been roundly criticized for not possessing a clear, coherent and consistent democratic vision. The absence of such a grand vision has resulted, from this critical perspective, in an absence of 'joined-up' thinking about democracy in an evolving multi-level state. Tensions have been all too apparent between the government's desire to exert central direction - manifested in its most pathological form as 'control freakery' - and its democratising initiatives derived from 'third-way' obsessions with 'decentralising', 'empowering' and 'enabling'. The purpose of this article is to examine why New Labour displayed such apparently impaired democratic vision and why it appeared incapable of conceiving of democ...
It is an article of faith amongst political reform campaigners that the existing First Past the Post...
Following the Scottish independence referendum, devolution for England is back of the agenda, with r...
This article argues that the Labour Party has no new vision for British social democracy. New Labour...
Since the election last May, the coalition government has pursued a wide-ranging programme of consti...
William Robinson’s work on democracy promotion focuses on polyarchy, or low-intensity democracy, a f...
Explanations for the decline in political disengagement often focus on what can be loosely termed th...
Has the rise of radical populist parties across Europe led to the opening up of a gap between what i...
Post-democracy and cognate concepts suggest that the postwar period of democratisation has given way...
The UK’s political and democratic system are under severe strain, with declining turnout and increas...
The article identifies a neglected dimension of the ‘crisis’ and schism of British social democracy ...
The ‘new Labour’ governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown altered the societal landscape in the UK...
In recent years many scholars have diagnosed a crisis of party politics. This article considers rece...
The article examines the emergence of the revisionist social democratic Manifesto Group in the Labou...
As the Labour party conference continues in the shadow of the wide-ranging implications of Scotland’...
Who is at fault for Britain’s democratic crisis? While political parties seek to be the solution to ...
It is an article of faith amongst political reform campaigners that the existing First Past the Post...
Following the Scottish independence referendum, devolution for England is back of the agenda, with r...
This article argues that the Labour Party has no new vision for British social democracy. New Labour...
Since the election last May, the coalition government has pursued a wide-ranging programme of consti...
William Robinson’s work on democracy promotion focuses on polyarchy, or low-intensity democracy, a f...
Explanations for the decline in political disengagement often focus on what can be loosely termed th...
Has the rise of radical populist parties across Europe led to the opening up of a gap between what i...
Post-democracy and cognate concepts suggest that the postwar period of democratisation has given way...
The UK’s political and democratic system are under severe strain, with declining turnout and increas...
The article identifies a neglected dimension of the ‘crisis’ and schism of British social democracy ...
The ‘new Labour’ governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown altered the societal landscape in the UK...
In recent years many scholars have diagnosed a crisis of party politics. This article considers rece...
The article examines the emergence of the revisionist social democratic Manifesto Group in the Labou...
As the Labour party conference continues in the shadow of the wide-ranging implications of Scotland’...
Who is at fault for Britain’s democratic crisis? While political parties seek to be the solution to ...
It is an article of faith amongst political reform campaigners that the existing First Past the Post...
Following the Scottish independence referendum, devolution for England is back of the agenda, with r...
This article argues that the Labour Party has no new vision for British social democracy. New Labour...