TL reading update 32
The latest issue of the BJPIR, 11.3 (2009) has a special section on the sub-prime crisis in Britain. Particularly interesting is a further instalment of Colin Crouch’s privatised Keynesianism hypothesis and a comparative paper by Colin Hay on UK-Ireland (especially housing) inflation:
Crouch, C. (2009) ‘Privatised Keynesianism: an unacknowledged policy regime’, British Journal of Politics […]
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Written by Roger on August 14th, 2009 with
no comments.
Read more articles on Thatcherism's Legacy (SS, TB I).
The latest issue of the BJPIR, 11.3 (2009) has a special section on the sub-prime crisis in Britain. Particularly interesting is a further instalment of Colin Crouch’s privatised Keynesianism hypothesis and a comparative paper by Colin Hay on UK-Ireland (especially housing) inflation:
Crouch, C. (2009) ‘Privatised Keynesianism: an unacknowledged policy regime’, British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 11 (3), pp.382-99.
Hay, C. (2009) ‘Good inflation, bad inflation: the housing boom, economic growth and the disaggregation of inflationary preferences in the UK and Ireland’, British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 11 (3), pp.461-78.
Also across my desk this week a new book by Andfrew Gamble:
Gamble, A.M. (2009) The spectre at the feast: capitalist crisis and the politics of recession. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Additionally, an excellent update on the VoC literature:
Hall, P.A. and Gingerich, D.W. (2009) ‘Varietiies of capitalism and institutional complementarities in the political economy: an empirical analysis’, British Journal of Political Science, 39 (3), pp.449-82.
and, although about the US and a presidency now - thankfully - in the past, quite instructive on how ideology impacts on politics:
High, B. (2009) ‘The recent historiography of American neoconservatism’, Historical Journal, 52 (2), pp.475-91.
Written by Roger on August 14th, 2009 with
no comments.
Read more articles on Thatcherism's Legacy (SS, TB I).