Amanote Research

Amanote Research

    RegisterSign In

Whose Left? Working-Class Political Allegiances in Post-Industrial Britain

International Review of Social History - United Kingdom
doi 10.1017/s0020859002000780
Full Text
Open PDF
Abstract

Available in full text

Categories
Social SciencesHistory
Date

November 1, 2002

Authors
Darren G. Lilleker
Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)


Related search

Personalization of Learning Environments in a Post-Industrial Class

English

Whose Reason, Whose Law, Whose Public? “The Political” and “Hegemonic Sovereignty” in Carl Schmitt

Synthesis Philosophica
Philosophy
2016English

Annual Hours Working in Britain

Personnel Review
Human Resource ManagementApplied PsychologyOrganizational Behavior
2007English

Imagining an Industrial Community: Industrialist and Working-Class Culture in Postwar Brazil

Anos 90
History
1998English

Statistics of Industrial Production in Britain

Nature
Multidisciplinary
1946English

An Analysis of Political Ambition in Britain

Political Quarterly
SociologyPolitical Science
2018English

Young People, Political Participation and Trust in Britain

Parliamentary Affairs
LawSociologyPolitical Science
2011English

Why Did the Industrial Revolution Start in Britain?

SSRN Electronic Journal
2015English

Imagining the Political in a Post-Political Environment

Journal of Extreme Anthropology
2018English

Amanote Research

Note-taking for researchers

Follow Amanote

© 2025 Amaplex Software S.P.R.L. All rights reserved.

Privacy PolicyRefund Policy