The Thatcher effect
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Thatcher effect
(Oxford paperbacks)
Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 1989
- : pbk
- Other Title
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The Thatcher effect : a decade of change
Available at / 37 libraries
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National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies Library (GRIPS Library)
: pbk312.33||Ka8900550187
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Note
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
A collection of papers written by distinguished academics and journalists, this study examines the effect of Margaret Thatcher's administration--since 1979 the dominant force in British politics--on such areas as the arts, the media, the civil service, the economy, the military, trade unions, local government, the churches, education, the law, and more. Each essay discusses the principal changes that have occurred since 1979, the role of the Thatcher government in promoting these changes, and the extent to which change would have occurred regardless of the government in power.
Table of Contents
- The Thatcher government's economic policy, Samuel Brittan
- Mrs. Thatcher and the city, Margaret Reid
- trade unions, B.C.Roberts
- the Conservative party, J.Enoch Powell
- the changing political opposition, Dennis Kavanagh
- cabinet and parliament, Peter Riddell
- the Civil Service, Peter Hennessy
- local government, Ken Young
- the constitution, Vernon Bogdanor
- Thatcherism and defence, Lawrence Freedman
- Britain and the world, Sir Anthony Parsons
- the health service, Charles Webster
- the schools, J.R.G.Tomlinson
- higher education, Peter Scott
- housing and the environment, Alan Murie
- the Irish connection, D.George Boyce
- values - the crusade that failed, Ivor Crewe
- divisions that unite Britain, Richard Rose
- the family, David Willetts
- the law, Graham Zellick
- the mass media, Alistair Hetherington
- the arts, Bryan Appleyard
- the Thatcher effect in science, Tom Wilkie
- the churches - pink bishops and the Iron Lady.
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