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The first study of the Churchill government of 1951-55 based on the
Prime Minister's political papers (including his correspondence
with President Eisenhower) and diaries and letters of Eden, Butler
and other ministers. A picture emerges, not of a Government
dominated by Churchill as in wartime, but of many sharp
disagreements about foreign and domestic policy. But in spite of
Churchill's stroke in 1953 and Eden's serious illness they emerged
to win major diplomatic successes. Meanwhile Butler and Macmillan
both attained leadership status.
The current debate about industrial relations cannot be understood
without a knowledge of trade-union history. Dr Pelling's book,
which has for several years been a standard work on the subject,
has again been revised and updated to take account of recent
research and to explain the course of events up to the Thatcher
years, the miner's strike and the Employment Acts. The growth of
white-collar unionism and the extension of women's rights are dealt
with in the concluding chapters.
The first study of the Churchill government of 1951-55 based on the
Prime Minister's political papers (including his correspondence
with President Eisenhower) and diaries and letters of Eden, Butler
and other ministers. A picture emerges, not of a Government
dominated by Churchill as in wartime, but of many sharp
disagreements about foreign and domestic policy. But in spite of
Churchill's stroke in 1953 and Eden's serious illness they emerged
to win major diplomatic successes. Meanwhile Butler and Macmillan
both attained leadership status.
Providing an introductory account of the Labour Party from its
foundation, this book covers the whole period up to the General
Election of 1992 and the subsequent choice of John Smith to succeed
Neil Kinnock as party leader. It also discusses the role of labour
unions within the party.
This text provides an introductory account of the Labour Party from
its foundation. It not only covers the period up to and including
the election of Neil Kinnock as the leader of the Labour Party but
also concentrates on the problems of the parliamentary leadership.
This book, by the author of the best-seller 'Winston Churchill' ,
is a concise reassessment of the first postwar British Governments
based upon original sources - a task not previously attempted by
any scholar. While sympathetic to Labour's aims in the 1945 general
election campaign - which itself receives fresh treatment - Henry
Pelling exposes areas of difficulty and weakness in the
Government's strategy and uncovers the doubts and hesitations of
its leaders. Much of the evidence comes from official papers
recently released to the Public Record Office; but the private
papers of Attlee, Morrison, Bevin and Dalton, among others, have
been drawn upon to add details to the story. For the first time,
too, there is a study of the importance of Marshall Aid, as well as
of the friction that is occassioned behind-the-scenes with the
Truman Administration and the US Congress. Highly readable, this
book makes a major contribution to recent history and to a better
understanding of the present political and international situation.
A survey of all the regions in Britain which considers how far
politics in the period 1885-1910 can be analyzed in terms of
religion, class, geographical area and other factors. The passing
of the Third Reform Act meant that elections were less corrupt and
that most adult males could vote.
This is a new release of the original 1960 edition.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Two main themes engage Professor Pelling, as he examines the events
of these seventy years: Britain's external difficulties and her
gradual recognition of the need to alter her political and economic
relations--not only with her "Empire" but with all other nations as
well--and the social and political conflicts at home. At the turn
of the century, Britain was a strongly imperialist nation.
Increasing rivalry with foreign countries for markets and pressure
for reform and an increased standard living at home brought about
the changes in foreign policy and internal affairs of the first
decade of the twentieth century. The Boer War, the Irish struggle
for home rule and independence, World War I, and World War II
accelerated the long term domestic developments. The elimination of
various nineteenth century forms of inferiority--the abysmal
poverty of the workers, unemployment, suppression of women, and
servility of the Welsh and Irish to the English--was accomplished
relatively peacefully. "Taken together, all these changes
transformed the character of British society and Britain's place in
the world. Generally speaking, where relations were simple and
hierarchical in the nineteenth century, they have now become
complex, with a resulting dispersal of authority."
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