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OverviewJoel Krieger, one of America's most perceptive observers of British politics, provides an in-depth study of New Labour. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Joel Krieger (Wellelsey College, USA)Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd Imprint: Polity Press Dimensions: Width: 15.40cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.80cm Weight: 0.340kg ISBN: 9780745620251ISBN 10: 0745620256 Pages: 232 Publication Date: 25 September 1999 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsPreface. Part I: Situating New Labour:. 1. Social Democracy: The British Case in Theoretical and Comparative Perspective. 2. New Labour: Regime Characteristics, Strategic Options, Dilemmas. Part Two: The Organization of Production:. 3. Social Democracy, Class and National Policy Sovereignty. 4. Globalization, Post-Fordism and the British Model. Part Three: The Unmaking of the English Working Class. 5. Women, Work and Social Policy. 6. Ethnic Minority Groups: Employment and Settlement Patterns. Part Four: Modular Politics:. 7. Modularity, Identities and Cultural Repertoires. 8. National Identities. 9. Communities: Actual and Imagined. Conclusion. . 10. Challenges to Contemporary British Government. Notes. References. Index.Reviewsa This is an ambitious and original study of the politics of New Labour ... It offers a fresh perspective and a challenging assessment of what New Labour needs to do to carry its project through to success.a Andrew Gamble, University of Sheffield a It is most exciting to have a book on New Labour that focuses not on political parties or personalities or even just on economic and constitutional challenges but on our changed social conditions -- and that includes new ethnicities and transnational identities. Ethnic minority groups are struggling with what community means -- in practical terms, what it means to be Muslim or Indian or black. Krieger sees these debates as key to the reconceptualization of collectivity today and challenges New Labour to connect these debates to its core value of community. His understanding of a new multicultural social democracy is an important contribution to the reformulation of centre--left politics -- and not just in Britain.a Tariq Modood, Professor of Sociology, Politics and Public Policy, University of Bristol a This is a powerful and original argument for the renewal of social democracy in Britain. Like Tony Blair, Joel Krieger recognizes that the Labour Party must break radically with the welfare state which it took the lead in establishing after World War Two.a Samuel H. Beer, Harvard University His analysis is something of a tour de force: globalisation and post--Fordism, deindustrialisation and the British working class, the impact of women and minorities on work and social policy. Michael St John Parker, Parliamentary Affairs . an important book that adds clarity to the often amorphous notion of globalization.The booka s conceptual and theoretical rigor, combined with its concern to analyse the effect of changed structural conditions on social democratic politics, serves as a useful antidote to the journalistic obsession with the Blair effect and the ubiquitous spin doctors.The book is an important and enriching contribution to the analysis of British politics. It eschews the language of no alternative to argue that in a global age New Labour can and should seek to craft a distinct form of social democratic politics equipped for a multinational and multiethnic Britain. It deserves to be widely read. Andrew P Geddes, University of Liverpool, American Political Science Review 'This is an ambitious and original study of the politics of New Labour ... It offers a fresh perspective and a challenging assessment of what New Labour needs to do to carry its project through to success.' Andrew Gamble, University of Sheffield 'It is most exciting to have a book on New Labour that focuses not on political parties or personalities or even just on economic and constitutional challenges but on our changed social conditions - and that includes new ethnicities and transnational identities. Ethnic minority groups are struggling with what community means - in practical terms, what it means to be Muslim or Indian or black. Krieger sees these debates as key to the reconceptualization of collectivity today and challenges New Labour to connect these debates to its core value of community. His understanding of a new multicultural social democracy is an important contribution to the reformulation of centre-left politics - and not just in Britain.' Tariq Modood, Professor of Sociology, Politics and Public Policy, University of Bristol 'This is a powerful and original argument for the renewal of social democracy in Britain. Like Tony Blair, Joel Krieger recognizes that the Labour Party must break radically with the welfare state which it took the lead in establishing after World War Two.' Samuel H. Beer, Harvard University His analysis is something of a tour de force: globalisation and post-Fordism, deindustrialisation and the British working class, the impact of women and minorities on work and social policy. Michael St John Parker, Parliamentary Affairs . an important book that adds clarity to the often amorphous notion of globalization.The book's conceptual and theoretical rigor, combined with its concern to analyse the effect of changed structural conditions on social democratic politics, serves as a useful antidote to the journalistic obsession with the Blair effect and the ubiquitous spin doctors.The book is an important and enriching contribution to the analysis of British politics. It eschews the language of no alternative to argue that in a global age New Labour can and should seek to craft a distinct form of social democratic politics equipped for a multinational and multiethnic Britain. It deserves to be widely read. Andrew P Geddes, University of Liverpool, American Political Science Review 'This is an ambitious and original study of the politics of New Labour ... It offers a fresh perspective and a challenging assessment of what New Labour needs to do to carry its project through to success.' Andrew Gamble, University of Sheffield 'It is most exciting to have a book on New Labour that focuses not on political parties or personalities or even just on economic and constitutional challenges but on our changed social conditions - and that includes new ethnicities and transnational identities. Ethnic minority groups are struggling with what "community" means - in practical terms, what it means to be Muslim or Indian or black. Krieger sees these debates as key to the reconceptualization of collectivity today and challenges New Labour to connect these debates to its core value of community. His understanding of a new multicultural social democracy is an important contribution to the reformulation of centre-left politics - and not just in Britain.' Tariq Modood, Professor of Sociology, Politics and Public Policy, University of Bristol 'This is a powerful and original argument for the renewal of social democracy in Britain. Like Tony Blair, Joel Krieger recognizes that the Labour Party must break radically with the welfare state which it took the lead in establishing after World War Two.' Samuel H. Beer, Harvard University "His analysis is something of a tour de force: globalisation and post-Fordism, deindustrialisation and the British working class, the impact of women and minorities on work and social policy." Michael St John Parker, Parliamentary Affairs " . an important book that adds clarity to the often amorphous notion of globalization.The book's conceptual and theoretical rigor, combined with its concern to analyse the effect of changed structural conditions on social democratic politics, serves as a useful antidote to the journalistic obsession with the "Blair effect" and the ubiquitous spin doctors..The book is an important and enriching contribution to the analysis of British politics. It eschews the language of "no alternative" to argue that in a global age New Labour can and should seek to craft a distinct form of social democratic politics equipped for a multinational and multiethnic Britain. It deserves to be widely read." Andrew P Geddes, University of Liverpool, American Political Science Review Author InformationJoel Krieger is Norma Wilentz Hess Professor of Poltical Science, Wellesley College, USA Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |