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A Century of Labour. Edition No. 1

  • Book

  • 288 Pages
  • January 2024
  • John Wiley and Sons Ltd
  • ID: 5863907

Britain’s first Labour government took office on 22 January 1924. Its centenary provides an opportunity to reassess the party's performance over the last 100 years, and with an election pending, the character and purpose of the modern party.

Labour defined the dominant political settlement of much of the Twentieth Century: the welfare state. It has achieved much in pursuit of material change, social reform and equality. It has challenged patriarchy, racism and the legacy of imperialism, promoted human rights and delivered democratic and constitutional renewal. Yet any honest assessment must acknowledge a century littered with failures and missed opportunities.

In this compelling book, Jon Cruddas, one of the country's foremost experts on Labour politics, details the vivid personalities and epic factional battles, the immense achievements and profound disappointments that define a century of Labour. Uniquely framed around competing visions of socialist justice within the Party, he provides a way to rethink Labour history, the divisions and factions on the left and to reassess key figures at the helm of the movement from Keir Hardie through to Keir Starmer.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Preface

Chapter 1: History
Chapter 2: Justice
Chapter 3: Origins
Chapter 4: Minorities: 1924-1931
Chapter 5: Thirties: 1931-1939
Chapter 6: Jerusalem: 1939-1951
Chapter 7: Waste: 1951-1964
Chapter 8: Strife: 1964-1979
Chapter 9: Wilderness: 1979-1987
Chapter 10: Revival: 1987-1997
Chapter 11: Landslides: 1997-2010
Chapter 12: Isolation: 2010-2024
Chapter 13: Purpose

Appendices
Notes
Index

Authors

Jon Cruddas Nuffield College, Oxford; University of Leicester; University of Birmingham, UK.