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 End of an Era in Pension Reform

Deborah MabbettMarch 25, 2014
The Financial Times (20 March) called it ‘the biggest pensions revolution for almost a century’ but their timing is a few decades out. The Chancellor’s budget a...
CommentEconomyUKWelfare & Inequality7 min read

Breaking Britain?

Tony WrightJanuary 21, 2014
It turns out that breaking up is not so very hard to do. It might have been thought that the prospect of the breaking of Britain, which would be the consequence...
CommentScotlandUK5 min read

Making Sense of Snowden

Michael JacobsOctober 17, 2013
Perhaps the most shocking revelation to emerge from the publication of the US National Security Agency (NSA) and GCHQ documents disclosed by the American whistl...
CommentInternational politicsLaw & Justice8 min read

Reflections on One Nation Labour

Michael JacobsSeptember 22, 2013
Ed Miliband’s speech to the 2012 Labour Party Conference was doubly significant. His bravura performance – speaking for more than an hour without notes – had a ...
CommentUK3 min read

After the Party?

Michael Jacobs and Tony WrightJuly 15, 2013
One of the central facts of recent British politics has been the decline of the political party. Fewer people are voting for them; memberships have collapsed; a...
CommentElectionsGovernmentUK5 min read

Tax and Spending (Again)

Michael JacobsMay 8, 2013
The depth of the spending cuts now being implemented by Whitehall departments and local authorities across the UK is unprecedented in postwar Britain. With heal...
CommentEconomyUK10 min read

Osborne v. Growth: The Chancellor and the new green economy

Michael JacobsMarch 25, 2013
The most telling comment on last week’s Budget came from the Government’s very own Office for Budget Responsibility. It acknowledged that the Chancellor’s measu...
CommentEconomyEnvironment5 min read

Gove is all around: Exams, public services and EU competition law

Michael JacobsFebruary 11, 2013
Michael Gove’s retreat on his plan to reform GCSE examinations has provided an object lesson in the perils of political hubris. If the Secretary of State hadn’t...
CommentEducationEuropeUK4 min read

Whitehall at War?

Tony WrightJanuary 18, 2013
The recent exposure of serious tensions between ministers and civil servants has once again highlighted this most sensitive of constitutional relationships. It ...
CommentGovernment5 min read

The Problem at No 10

Michael JacobsNovember 21, 2012
The extraordinary glimpse into the inner workings of No 10 given in a rare interview by David Cameron’s Deputy Chief of Staff, Oliver Dowden – in which he admit...
CommentGovernmentUK5 min read

Obama’s Victory: Non-Lessons for Britain

Michael JacobsNovember 7, 2012
Barack Obama's remarkable victory proves one thing at least: just how distorting is the first past the post electoral system. Obama's convincing triumph in the ...
CommentInternational politics4 min read

The Coalition’s carbon crunch

Michael JacobsOctober 18, 2012
David Cameron’s announcement that the Government would legislate to force energy companies to put customers on their lowest tariffs sounded good for a couple of...
CommentEconomyEnvironmentUK6 min read
  • 1
  • …
  • 26
  • 27
  • 28
  • 29

Subscribe to our newsletter

Newsletter

Contact Us

© 2022 The Political Quarterly
Scroll Up