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The Coalition Effect, 2010β2015
About this book
The British general election of May 2010 delivered the first coalition government since the Second World War. David Cameron and Nick Clegg pledged a 'new politics' with the government taking office in the midst of the worst economic crisis since the 1930s. Five years on, a team of leading experts drawn from academia, the media, Parliament, Whitehall and think tanks assesses this 'coalition effect' across a broad range of policy areas. Adopting the contemporary history approach, this pioneering book addresses academic and policy debates across this whole range of issues. Did the coalition represent the natural 'next step' in party dealignment and the evolution of multi-party politics? Was coalition in practice a historic innovation in itself, or did the essential principles of Britain's uncodified constitution remain untroubled? Fundamentally, was the coalition able to deliver on its promises made in the coalition agreement, and what were the consequences - for the country and the parties - of this union?
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half-title
- Title page
- Copyright information
- Table of contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- David Cameron as Prime Minister, 2010β2015: The verdict of history
- Part I The coalition and the government of Britain
- Part II The coalition and policy
- Part III The coalition and political culture
- Part IV Conclusion
- Index