British politics, Brexit, 20th century Britain, referendum, Boris Johnson, politic theory, Andrew Gamble, political economy, traditional institutionalism, feminism, neo-pluralism
Twentieth-century British politics have been linked to one of the most discussed primal concepts within the existing global affairs, particularly throughout the past seven years. With fundamental referendums which exceptionally resulted in the dramatic withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union, and consequently three elections with two general elections preceding sooner than was called for, Great Britain has certainly experienced a period of events that have changed the nation's political approach for the future. The apparent reception of the 20th century British politics following the dramatic events has left global opinions split, with many people pleased with Johnson's advancement of Brexit, while others with contradicted feelings of frustration and betrayal over the past four years of politicians failing to properly accomplish set demands and general uncertainly. For many activists, political analyzers, commentators, and members of the British public, many theories have been used to interpret collective government decisions as well as the approaches used by politicians in the bureaucratic administration of Great Britain.
[...] & Birch, S. (2015). Ethics and integrity in British politics. Cambridge University Press. Coxall, W. N. (2014). Pressure groups in British politics. Routledge. [...]
[...] (2020). Exploring British Politics. Routledge. Green, J. (2011). A test of core vote theories: The British Conservatives - 2005. British Journal of Political Science, 735-764. John, P. (2018). [...]
[...] The political economy may work in two fundamental ways. Thompson indicated that despite much contingency within the Brexit result, the results reflected the unique structure of the relationship between politics and economy in Great Britain; "Structural forces generated by Britain's singular macro-political economy created a relatively high degree of profitability that the denouement of Britain's membership of the European Union would be reached under the conditions of the Conservative Party being in office" (Gamble, 2021). Neo-pluralism remains likely to offer additional fruitful insights into the politics of the British, as critical sectorial factors become dominant. [...]
[...] With a particular reference to the politics of Great Britain, Gamble Andrew noted that "the study of British Politics had become more fragmented with no single dominant perspective" (Green, 2011). Many theories of British politics have evolved since Andrew Gamble drafted his classic paper. Andrew identified the rather controversial British school of traditional thinking; a strategic critique that was based on behaviorism; political economy based on critical formal models; state theory rooted in Marxist and allied thinking; and theories about significant policy-making operations (Green, 2011). [...]
[...] Theories of British Politics Following the focus of some institutions in the description of British politics, it is no surprise that strategic varieties of institutionalism have dominated the field (Garnett, Dorey & Lynch, 2020). Andrew described it as the British School, which focused on the development and evolution of executive and parliamentary institutions, which date back to the legal work on the sovereignty of the parliament and how such powers may get limited by parliamentary conventions and the rule of law. [...]
APA Style reference
For your bibliographyOnline reading
with our online readerContent validated
by our reading committee