Sacred Cows and Common Sense

Regular price €122.99
A01=Tim Bale
Author_Tim Bale
British Labour Party
British political culture
Category=JP
Category=JPL
Chronic Sick
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eq_society-politics
Equal Duty
Exemption Scheme
Free Prescriptions
Gordon Walker
Health Charges
Health Service Charges
IMF Crisis
IMF Deal
IMF Involvement
IMF Mission
Iron Chancellor
Labour Leaders
Labour Party NEC
Labour’s NEC
Motivational Role Theory
NHS Charge
Pet Professors
PLP Meeting
Prescription Charges
sacred cow preservation society
Social Democratic Alliance
social democratic defensiveness
South African Arms
Tribune Group
TUC’s Annual Report
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138350922
  • Weight: 690g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 219mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Jun 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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First published in 1999, this volume is based on interviews and research from previously unavailable party, state and private archives, this insightful volume reflects on the interaction between institutional structure and world-view that we call political culture. Using Labour’s post-war welfare policy, this informative study makes three key points:

  • The need to break down distinctions between the ‘symbolic’ and the ‘substantial’ in politics.
  • The potential of ‘Grid-Group’ or ‘Cultural’ Theory as a way of understanding party political culture.
  • The crucial but self-defeating role that welfare policy has played in Labour’s efforts to manage itself, win support and govern competently.

The well-documented research leads to the conclusion that New Labour’s much-heralded desire to ‘think the unthinkable’ about welfare is largely rhetorical if one recalls what Labour did in office rather than promised in opposition. The Government’s welfare reforms, rather than constituting a serious attempt to confront new social realities, are in fact par for the course.

Political scientists cannot ignore the new government’s past. Political historians need to appreciate the patterns woven in a welter of detail and social democratic defensiveness. By fusing a realist conception of statecraft, an ‘interpretavist’ interest in symbols and a predictive comparative model of the interaction between ideology and organisation, this authoritative work will enable readers to do just that.