Augmenting Democracy
Political Movements and Constitutional Reform During the Rise of Labour, 1900-1924

Routledge Revivals Series

Author:

Language: English

40.18 €

In Print (Delivery period: 14 days).

Add to cartAdd to cart
Augmenting Democracy
Publication date:
· 15.2x22.9 cm · Paperback

129.87 €

In Print (Delivery period: 14 days).

Add to cartAdd to cart
Augmenting Democracy
Publication date:
· 15.2x22.9 cm · Hardback
First published in 1999, Andrew Chadwick provides an important new interpretation of British radical, suffrage-feminist and socialist movements during the first quarter of the twentieth century, based on analysis of their visions of democratic constitutional reform. He argues that a shared discourse of 'radical constitutionalism' allowed these groups to forge alliances based upon a common preoccupation with extending and improving constitutional democracy. This book is a significant contribution to current methodological debates around the importance of language and discourse in social and political history. It is the first detailed study to integrate material on three important constitutional campaigns of this era: the reform of the House of Lords, women?s suffrage, and proportional representation. It will be of interest to students of British politics, social and political history, historical methodology and political theory.

Part 1. A Panoramic Approach. 1. Left and Constitution in the Early-Twentieth Century Britain. 2. Ideas, communication and public political discourse. Part 2. Aristocracy or the People?The Edwardian Constitutional Crisis. 4. Constructing an Anti-Lords Alliance. 4. Crisis and Reform. Part 3. Constitutionalism and Citizenship: The Struggle for the Vote. 5. First Wave Feminism and the Significance of the Vote. 6. Constructing a Suffragist Alliance. 7. War and Reform. Part 4. Equality, Equity and Truth? Proportional Representation. 8. Minorities, Parties and the Progressive Alliance. 9. A Fragile, Partial Alliance.

Andrew Chadwick