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Project X Origins: Green Book Band, Oxford Level 5: Flight: On the Wing - Claire Llewellyn - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Numicon Pupil Book 5: Answers - Wing - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

The Huddle - Sean Julian - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

New Labour at the Centre - Andrew Hindmoor - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

New Labour at the Centre - Andrew Hindmoor - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Taking as its starting-point Anthony Downs'' seminal work, An Economic Theory of Democracy, this book draws upon insights generated within economics, political psychology, and the study of rhetoric to examine the way in which New Labour achieved and maintained its electoral hegemony from 1994.Journalists and politicians routinely attribute New Labour''s electoral success to its occupation of the ''centre-ground''. This book is interested in the question of how New Labour moved to the right and towards the centre. The obvious answer to this question is that New Labour moved by changing its policies. Against this, the book contends that changes in policy cannot in themselves constitute a complete explanation of changes in spatial position. They cannot do so because there is no pre-given and fixed relationship between policies and position such that the rejection of one policy and the adoption of another moves a party from one position to another. Policies are not immutably left-wing, right-wing, or centrist and so, given that the position a party is thought to occupy is a function of the policies to which it is committed, parties are not immutably left-wing, right-wing, or centrist either. The relationship between policy and position and thereby between parties and position is constructed and is in part constructed by parties themselves. New Labour did not simply move to the centre. It had to persuade the media, voters, and other parties that it had moved to the centre. New Labour achieved and maintained its electoral hegemony not simply by changing one set of policies for another. It achieved and maintained its hegemony by successfully constructing its policies as centrist.

DKK 763.00
1

Numicon at Home First Steps Kit - Tony Wing - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Heimat - A German Dream - Elizabeth Boa - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Heimat - A German Dream - Elizabeth Boa - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Reading and Rebellion - - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Carl Schmitt's State and Constitutional Theory - Benjamin (lecturer Schupmann - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Carl Schmitt's State and Constitutional Theory - Benjamin (lecturer Schupmann - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Can a constitutional democracy commit suicide? Can an illiberal antidemocratic party legitimately obtain power through democratic elections and amend liberalism and democracy out of the constitution entirely? In Weimar Germany, these theoretical questions were both practically and existentially relevant. By 1932, the Nazi and Communist parties combined held a majority of seats in parliament. Neither accepted the legitimacy of liberal democracy. Their only reason for participating democratically was to amend the constitution out of existence. This book analyses Carl Schmitt''s state and constitutional theory and shows how it was conceived in response to the Weimar crisis. Right-wing and left-wing political extremists recognized that a path to legal revolution lay in the Weimar constitution''s combination of democratic procedures, total neutrality toward political goals, and positive law. Schmitt''s writings sought to address the unique problems posed by mass democracy. Schmitt''s thought anticipated ''constrained'' or ''militant'' democracy, a type of constitution that guards against subversive expressions of popular sovereignty and whose mechanisms include the entrenchment of basic constitutional commitments and party bans.Schmitt''s state and constitutional theory remains important: the problems he identified continue to exist within liberal democratic states. Schmitt offers democrats today a novel way to understand the legitimacy of liberal democracy and the limits of constitutional change.

DKK 929.00
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Numicon: Number, Pattern and Calculating 2 Explorer Progress Books ABC (Mixed pack) - Tony Wing - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Numicon: Number, Pattern and Calculating 6 Explorer Progress Books ABC (Mixed pack) - Tony Wing - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Numicon: Number, Pattern and Calculating 4 Explorer Progress Books ABC (Mixed pack) - Tony Wing - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Michael Young, Social Science, and the British Left, 1945-1970 - Lise (lecturer In Modern History Butler - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Michael Young, Social Science, and the British Left, 1945-1970 - Lise (lecturer In Modern History Butler - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

In post-war Britain, left-wing policy maker and sociologist Michael Young played a major role in shaping British intellectual, political, and cultural life, using his study of the social sciences to inform his political thought. In the mid-twentieth century the social sciences significantly expanded, and played a major role in shaping British intellectual, political and cultural life. Central to this intellectual shift was the left-wing policy maker and sociologist Michael Young. As a Labour Party policy maker in the 1940s, Young was a key architect of the Party''s 1945 election manifesto, ''Let Us Face the Future''. He became a sociologist in the 1950s, publishing a classic study of the East London working class, Family and Kinship in East London with Peter Willmott in 1957, which he followed up with a dystopian satire, The Rise of the Meritocracy, about a future society in which social status was determined entirely by intelligence. Young was also a prolific social innovator, founding or inspiring dozens of organisations, including the Institute of Community Studies, the Consumers'' Association, Which? magazine, the Social Science Research Council and the Open University. Moving between politics, social science, and activism, Young believed that disciplines like sociology, psychology and anthropology could help policy makers and politicians understand human nature, which in turn could help them to build better political and social institutions.This book examines the relationship between social science and public policy in left-wing politics between the end of the Second World War and the end of the first Wilson government through the figure of Michael Young. Drawing on Young''s prolific writings, and his intellectual and political networks, it argues that he and other social scientists and policy makers drew on contemporary ideas from the social sciences to challenge key Labour values, like full employment and nationalisation, and to argue that the Labour Party should put more emphasis on relationships, family, and community. Showing that the social sciences were embedded in the project of social democratic governance in post-war Britain, it argues that historians and scholars should take their role in British politics and political thought seriously

DKK 884.00
1

Writing and Righting - Lyndsey Stonebridge - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Sellars and his Legacy - - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Sellars and his Legacy - - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

This collection of new essays on the systematic thought and intellectual legacy of the American philosopher Wilfrid Sellars (1912-1989) comes at a time when Sellars''s influence on contemporary debates about mind, meaning, knowledge, and metaphysics has never been greater. Sellars was among the most important philosophers of the twentieth century, and many of his central ideas have become philosophical stock-in-trade: for example, his conceptions of the ''myth of the given'', the ''logical space of reasons'', and the ''clash'' between the ''manifest and scientific images of man-in-the-world''. This volume of well-known contemporary philosophers who have been strongly influenced by Sellars--Robert Brandom, Willem deVries, Robert Kraut, Rebecca Kukla, Mark Lance, John McDowell, Ruth Millikan, James O''Shea, David Rosenthal, Johanna Seibt, and Michael Williams--critically examines the groundbreaking ideas by means of which Sellars sought to integrate our thought, perception, and rational agency within a naturalistic outlook on reality. Topics include Sellars''s inferentialist semantics and normative functionalist view of the mind; his attempted reconciliations of internalist and externalist aspects of thought, meaning, and knowledge; his novel nominalist account of abstract entities; and a speculative ''pure process'' metaphysics of consciousness. Of particular interest is how this volume exhibits the ongoing fruitful dialogue between so-called ''left-wing Sellarsians'', who stress Sellars''s various Kantian and pragmatist defenses of the irreducibility of normativity and rationality within the space of reasons, and ''right-wing Sellarsians'' who defend the plausibility of Sellars''s highly ambitious and systematic scientific naturalism.

DKK 848.00
1