The New Liberalism

The New Liberalism
Title The New Liberalism PDF eBook
Author Peter Weiler
Publisher Routledge
Pages 220
Release 2016-07-15
Genre History
ISBN 1315524244

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This title, first published in 1982, explores the new Liberalism - the great change in Liberalism as an ideology and a political practice that characterised the years before the First World War - and examines the idea that the new Liberals successfully overcame the need they saw in the 1890’s to make Liberalism more socially reformist. This title will be of interest to students of social and political history.

The New Liberalism

The New Liberalism
Title The New Liberalism PDF eBook
Author Jeffrey M. Berry
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 1999
Genre Free enterprise
ISBN 9780815709077

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This text argues that modern liberalism in the United States is not only still alive, but is actually thriving, using evidence from the past four decades.

The New Liberalism

The New Liberalism
Title The New Liberalism PDF eBook
Author Michael Freeden
Publisher
Pages 308
Release 1986
Genre Political Science
ISBN

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This book examines the advent of the "new liberalism" in late Victorian and Edwardian times, challenging accepted views about its development. Freeden analyzes concepts of community, welfare, and state regulation in political theory and stresses the contribution of biological and evolutionary ideas to changing liberal attitudes.

Lancashire and the New Liberalism

Lancashire and the New Liberalism
Title Lancashire and the New Liberalism PDF eBook
Author P. F. Clarke
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 494
Release 2007-03-26
Genre History
ISBN 9780521035576

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Why was there a Liberal Government in Britain from 1905 until the First World War? And why was the Liberal party replaced by the Labour party so shortly afterwards? These are the kinds of problems which Dr Clarke examines in his study of the Liberal revival in Lancashire. The vote in north-west England was largely responsible for bringing the Liberal Government into power and for maintaining its position, but it also produced almost half the new Labour MP's in 1906. Thus any satisfactory interpretation of electoral history in the early twentieth century must account for what happened in Lancashire. This book calls into question many of the conventional assumptions about British politics in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

The New Liberalism

The New Liberalism
Title The New Liberalism PDF eBook
Author Avital Simhony
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 260
Release 2001-08-23
Genre Political Science
ISBN 9780521794046

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Essays on new liberalism demonstrate that liberalism can accommodate community, rights and liberty.

The Making of Modern Liberalism

The Making of Modern Liberalism
Title The Making of Modern Liberalism PDF eBook
Author Alan Ryan
Publisher Princeton University Press
Pages 682
Release 2012
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 0691148406

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The Making of Modern Liberalism is a deep and wide-ranging exploration of the origins and nature of liberalism from the Enlightenment through its triumphs and setbacks in the twentieth century and beyond. The book is the fruit of the more than four decades during which Alan Ryan, one of the world's leading political thinkers, reflected on the past of the liberal tradition-and worried about its future.This is essential reading for anyone interested in political theory or the history of liberalism.

The Oxford Handbook of International Relations

The Oxford Handbook of International Relations
Title The Oxford Handbook of International Relations PDF eBook
Author Christian Reus-Smit
Publisher OUP Oxford
Pages 792
Release 2010-07-01
Genre Political Science
ISBN 0191003255

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The Oxford Handbook of International Relations offers the most authoritative and comprehensive overview to date of the field of international relations. Arguably the most impressive collection of international relations scholars ever brought together within one volume, the Handbook debates the nature of the field itself, critically engages with the major theories, surveys a wide spectrum of methods, addresses the relationship between scholarship and policy making, and examines the field's relation with cognate disciplines. The Handbook takes as its central themes the interaction between empirical and normative inquiry that permeates all theorizing in the field and the way in which contending approaches have shaped one another. In doing so, the Handbook provides an authoritative and critical introduction to the subject and establishes a sense of the field as a dynamic realm of argument and inquiry. The Oxford Handbook of International Relations will be essential reading for all of those interested in the advanced study of global politics and international affairs.