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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Peter Sloman (Junior Research Fellow in Modern British History, Junior Research Fellow in Modern British History, New College, Oxford)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.10cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.20cm Weight: 0.510kg ISBN: 9780198723509ISBN 10: 0198723504 Pages: 294 Publication Date: 06 November 2014 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsIntroduction 1: Economic inheritances 2: The Liberals, Keynes, and the slump, 1929-31 3: Defending economic internationalism, 1931-5 4: From 'middle opinion' to Ownership for All, 1935-9 5: Planning for war and peace, 1939-45 6: Clement Davies and liberal Keynesianism, 1945-56 7: Jo Grimond and the Liberal revival, 1956-64 Conclusion BibliographyReviewsa major contribution to the history of the party ... a well-researched and lucid monograph Professor Chris Wrigley, Twentieth Century British History a fresh and nuanced picture of the development of ... Liberal economic thought Professor Tomoari Matsunaga, Journal of Economics Library Peter Sloman's excellent first book ... fills an important gap in the historiography of British party politics in the middle decades of the twentieth century Professor David Dutton, Journal of British Studies By tracing the evolving positions on economic policy from the 1920s through to the mid-1960s, he provides an interesting look at the transformation of liberal economic thought at a time of dramatic change. Mark Klobas, Political Studies Review a major contribution to the history of the party ... a well-researched and lucid monograph Professor Chris Wrigley, Twentieth Century British History a fresh and nuanced picture of the development of ... Liberal economic thought Professor Tomoari Matsunaga, Journal of Economics Library Peter Sloman's excellent first book ... fills an important gap in the historiography of British party politics in the middle decades of the twentieth century Professor David Dutton, Journal of British Studies Sloman's book should be required reading for all strategists, as it ought to be for all serious students of modern British politics. Roger Middleton, American Historical Review Peter Sloman's excellent first book ... fills an important gap in the historiography of British party politics in the middle decades of the twentieth century Professor David Dutton, Journal of British Studies the first complete account of Liberal economic policy-making in the context of evolving liberal political thought ... As the Lib Dems contemplate their new wilderness years, Sloman's book should be required reading for all strategists, as it ought to be for all serious students of modern British politics. Professor Roger Middleton, American Historical Review Peter Sloman ... examines a major theme of Liberal Party history and in so doing makes a major contribution to the history of the party as a whole in 192964. It is a well-researched and lucid monograph. Professor Chris Wrigley, Twentieth Century British History a critical, elegant and thoroughgoing contribution to the literature on economic policy-making in the twentieth century ... will repay deep attention and repeated re-reading Professor Glen O'Hara, Contemporary British History 16/01/2017 Peter Sloman's careful and well-documented examination of the Liberal Party's economic policies from the mid-1920s to the mid-1960s suggests that there was more to British liberalism than its electoral failure ... [and] gives us an additional perspective on the boundaries of liberalism in the twentieth century. Dr Emile Chabal, Contemporary European History 16/01/2017 Peter Sloman ... very effectively demonstrates [that] there was a world of difference between the popularity of progressive, inventive and often highly original Liberal ideas about public policy, and the immensely more complex and multi-dimensional task of re-establishing Liberalism, both at the 'grass-roots' and at a 'high-political' level, as a plausible party of government Professor Jose Harris, English Historical Review an ambitious but successful analysis of the development of British Liberals' economic thought over a period of electoral decline and postwar revival Professor George Peden, Economic History Review a welcome contribution to understanding how the party survived and then started to grow again, as well as providing some fascinating glimpses of the inter-relationship between political parties and economists and economic journalists in the mid-twentieth century. Dr Ian Packer, Cercles It will prove of great value for future research ... unfailingly scholarly ... a most valuable contribution to this field of study Dr J. Graham Jones, Journal of Liberal History For the reader interested in British liberalism, the book is ... a treasure trove of new discoveries. Dr Detmar Doering, Jahrbuch zur Liberalismus-Forschung a fresh and nuanced picture of the development of ... Liberal economic thought Professor Tomoari Matsunaga, Journal of Economics Library By tracing the evolving positions on economic policy from the 1920s through to the mid-1960s, [Sloman] provides an interesting look at the transformation of liberal economic thought at a time of dramatic change. Mark Klobas, Political Studies Review Author InformationPeter Sloman has written several articles on aspects of twentieth-century British history. This is his first book. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |