Political Quarterly Blog
  • Browse by topic
    • Brexit
    • Devolution
    • Economy
    • Education
    • Elections
    • Environment
    • Europe
    • Feminism
    • Government
    • Health
    • Law & Justice
    • Media & culture
    • Science & tech
    • UK
      • Northern Ireland
      • Scotland
      • Wales
    • Welfare & Inequality
  • Journal
    • Journal website
    • Read journal online
    • Subscribe
  • Events
  • About
    • About us
    • History
    • Editorial board
    • Bookshop
    • Contact Us
    • Write for us
  • Search
Political Quarterly Blog
  • Browse by topic
    • Brexit
    • Devolution
    • Economy
    • Education
    • Elections
    • Environment
    • Europe
    • Feminism
    • Government
    • Health
    • Law & Justice
    • Media & culture
    • Science & tech
    • UK
      • Northern Ireland
      • Scotland
      • Wales
    • Welfare & Inequality
  • Journal
    • Journal website
    • Read journal online
    • Subscribe
  • Events
  • About
    • History
    • Editorial board
    • Bookshop
    • Write for us
    • Contact Us
  • About us
Lost your password?

The new ‘Ten Year Rule’ and the defence ‘commentariat’

Andrew DormanFebruary 27, 2016
As outlined in ‘The Curious Incident of Mr Cameron and the United Kingdom Defence Budget: A New Legacy?’ David Cameron has managed to undertake one of the most ...
CommentUK4 min read

The Commons Select Committee System in the 2015–2020 Parliament

Ian MarshFebruary 13, 2016
The House of Commons select committees witnessed some of the most constructive political theatre of the 2010-2015 Parliament. Recall Rupert Murdoch’s public con...
CommentGovernmentUK5 min read

The March Towards Post-Democracy, Ten Years On

Colin CrouchFebruary 6, 2016
The motor industry is still being rocked by the revelation that Volkswagen installed software that falsified the results of diesel emissions tests. But this is ...
EconomyInternational politicsOther5 min read

The Future of Parties and Post-Democracy

Kate DommettFebruary 1, 2016
Party politics has long been associated with narratives of decline. Falls in party membership, loyalty and participation seem to indicate that parties are in cr...
GovernmentOtherUK4 min read

Hurry or you will lose: David Cameron and the Brexit Referendum

Matt QvortrupJanuary 21, 2016
No wonder David Cameron is in a hurry to hold the EU referendum. If he waits until next year he will lose the vote. This is the conclusion of a paper I have jus...
BrexitCommentUK5 min read

Hard Labour

Ben JacksonJanuary 2, 2016
There is something about the Labour Party that makes otherwise rigorous left-wing thinkers misplace their critical faculties. Guardian columnists, radical acade...
CommentElectionsUK8 min read

Social policy through the looking glass: how to make poor households poorer

Deborah MabbettSeptember 9, 2015
Forty years ago, the main method for evaluating social policy changes was to devise ‘profiles’ - examples of households in different circumstances – and examine...
CommentUKWelfare & Inequality10 min read

After the Election: Where Now?

Tony WrightJune 19, 2015
We are now all being wise after the event. It seems so obvious that this was an election that the Conservatives were likely to win, a fact only obscured by thos...
CommentElections5 min read

Business and Labour

Deborah MabbettApril 4, 2015
In the run-up to the election, senior business leaders have launched an attack on Labour’s policies. No-one should be surprised at this criticism. Labour presum...
CommentEconomy8 min read

The Mould Broken

Tony WrightFebruary 2, 2015
A long generation ago, in 1979, Roy Jenkins announced in his Dimbleby lecture that the time had come to break the mould of British politics. It has taken a long...
CommentScotland6 min read

Territorial Politics after the Scottish ‘No’

Deborah MabbettOctober 6, 2014
The Scottish referendum has been and gone, and attention has turned quickly to the prospect of another referendum, on Europe. Surveys suggest that the Scots are...
CommentScotlandUK8 min read

Broken Politics?

Tony WrightAugust 6, 2014
It is a commonplace of commentary that the Westminster political system is broken. Here is the political journalist Gaby Hinsliff, recently reviewing a book on ...
CommentElectionsUK5 min read
  • 1
  • …
  • 25
  • 26
  • 27
  • 28
  • 29

Subscribe to our newsletter

Newsletter

Contact Us

© 2022 The Political Quarterly
Scroll Up