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Why is cabinet government so resilient? Despite many obituaries,
why does it continue to be the vehicle for governing across most
parliamentary systems? Comparing Cabinets answers these questions
by examining the structure and performance of cabinet government in
five democracies: the United Kingdom, Denmark, the Netherlands,
Switzerland, and Australia. The book is organised around the
dilemmas that cabinet governments must solve: how to develop the
formal rules and practices that can bring predictability and
consistency to decision making; how to balance good policy with
good politics; how to ensure cohesion between the factions and
parties that constitute the cabinet while allowing levels of
self-interest to be advanced; how leaders can balance persuasion
and command; and how to maintain support through accountability at
the same time as being able to make unpopular decisions. All these
dilemmas are continuing challenges to cabinet government, never
solvable, and constantly reappearing in different forms. Comparing
distinct parliamentary systems reveals how traditions, beliefs, and
practices shape the answers. There is no single definition of
cabinet government, but rather arenas and shared practices that
provide some cohesion. Such a comparative approach allows greater
insight into the process of cabinet government that cannot be
achieved in the study of any single political system, and an
understanding of the pressures on each system by appreciating the
options that are elsewhere accepted as common beliefs.
Victorian Britain, at the head of the vast British Empire, was the
wealthiest and most powerful country in the world, yet not all
Britons were seen as possessing the characteristics that defined
what it actually meant to be 'British.' At the Margins of Victorian
Britain focuses on the political means of policing unwanted
'others' in Victorian society: the Irish, Catholics and Jews,
atheists, prostitutes and homosexuals. In this groundbreaking
study, Dennis Grube details the laws and conventions that were
legally and culturally enforced in order to bar these 'others' from
gaining power and influence in Victorian Britain. Utilising a
wide-ranging analysis, the book focuses on key case studies
including the anti-Semitism implicit in Lord Rothschild's barring
from the House of Commons, the fine line between accepted male love
and companionship and homosexuality, culminating in the Oscar Wilde
trials of the 1890s, and how laws against disease were used to
police prostitutes and correct moral vices. As Jews, Roman
Catholics and atheists were brought into a genuine sense of
partnership in the British constitution by being allowed to seek
election to Parliament, homosexuals, prostitutes and the allegedly
innately criminal Irish found themselves further and more
vehemently displaced as the nineteenth century progressed.
'Otherness' stopped being a religious question and instead became a
moral one. That fundamental shift marks the moment that
'Britishness' became a values-based question.This will be essential
reading for those working in the fields of Victorian studies,
social and cultural history and constitutional identity.
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Paperback
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R205
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