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In Liberalism and Crime, Robert Sullivan offers an alternate way of
looking at liberalism, using the usurpation of the welfare state in
Britain by a free market-oriented economy as his crucible. Not
content with the academic interpretation of liberalism as an
offshoot of analytic philosophy, Sullivan has woven together a
convincing demonstration that liberalism is born out of an
alternative approach--one based in active thought and reasonable
argument. The tapestry of this study touches on the breakup of
British Marxism, the influence of crime on British polity, and the
arguments of Ronald Clarke against 'medical criminology.' Shifting
societal responsibility onto the individual citizen, this new,
alternative, model of liberalism was fully ushered in by the rise
of Margaret Thatcher and continued with Tony Blair and the New
Labour movement in the 1990s. Because similar shifts occurred in
the United States simultaneously, this argument should be of
interest to both general American and British readers, as well as
academics in political theory, cultural studies, criminology, and
British studies.
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