We are delighted to announce Will Jennings, Lawrence McKay and Gerry Stoker worthy winners of the annual Bernard Crick Prize for Best Article 2021 for ‘The Poli...
Do you have a background in politics/economics/social policy? Can you turn longform academic writing into sparkling, concise blogs? Are you passionate about hel...
The Political Quarterly 2020 Annual Lecture by Amelia Gentleman
If you missed our 2020 virtual Annual Lecture, you can watch it here:
https://www.youtub...
The laws, regulations and practices around managing elections have accumulated over time to deal with ad-hoc problems and are therefore unfit for purpose in an...
The context of the review
The Labour Together review of the 2019 election was published on 19 June 2020, almost exactly six months after the party suffered ...
The contemporary debate in UK higher education about the need to “decolonise the curriculum” stems in large part from the pressure applied by a sustained stude...
In the 2018 Political Quarterly lecture, Timothy Garton Ash, Professor of European Studies at Oxford, Guardian columnist and lifelong liberal, addresses one of ...
Alfie Stirling, Laurie Laybourn-Langton
It is widely accepted that macroeconomic policy in the UK and the USA has experienced two major periods of breakdown an...
Bert Provan
Large social housing estates – often high-rise post war blocks – are common in Europe. Frequently seen as problem neighbourhoods, these estates hav...
Adrian Pabst
Much of the post-2017 general election analysis has focused on Theresa May’s spectacular fall from grace and the surge in support for Jeremy Corb...
Deborah Mabbett
The Conservatives expected to win in 2017, and the manifesto was written accordingly. For the small team in Number 10, it was an opportunity ...
Chris Allen
Chris Allen
Following the news that West Midlands Police have arrested five serving members of the British army on suspicion of being membe...