The British Conservative Party and the state, 1929-1940

<p>This thesis examines the Conservative Party’s attitude towards the role of the state between its loss of the 1929 election and the downfall of the National Government in May 1940. The appropriate extent of government intervention was one of the most important political debates in the twenti...

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Main Author: Prescott, WJ
Other Authors: Grimley, M
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
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author Prescott, WJ
author2 Grimley, M
author_facet Grimley, M
Prescott, WJ
author_sort Prescott, WJ
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description <p>This thesis examines the Conservative Party’s attitude towards the role of the state between its loss of the 1929 election and the downfall of the National Government in May 1940. The appropriate extent of government intervention was one of the most important political debates in the twentieth century, and is critical to understanding the social and economic policies of a controversial decade. Despite this, how the governing Conservatives viewed the state remains neglected. Historians of 1930s Tory domestic policy have variously argued it was too interventionist, not interventionist enough, or quite reasonable. This thesis answers this question by examining an extensive range of archival and other primary sources. In doing so, it provides the first overview of the National Government’s domestic policymaking.</p> <p>The thesis has six chapters. Chapter one outlines the evolution of Conservatism from the advent of the mass electorate up to 1929. Chapter two explores the development of Conservative policy in opposition up until the party’s unexpected return to government via the multi-party National Government 1931. This is treated separately to the remaining chapters to better assess the impact being in coalition had on policymaking. For the 1931-40 period, the thesis breaks into four case studies: industrial reorganisation, welfare, housing, and education. These four topics were chosen because they were of great contemporary significance. Additionally, because the Conservatives reacted differently in each policy area, comparing them reveals where Tory ideological boundaries lay.</p> <p>This thesis argues that while most Conservatives were reluctant to turn to the state at first instance, they would at least tolerate state intervention when they believed a key institution was threatened. It further argues that while Conservatism was open to outside influences, whether from coalition partners, ex-Liberals, or civil servants, this was only where those ideas were in accordance with what they understood as Conservative principles.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:180931e5-eb28-453c-93b8-dd6481f19e572023-12-06T11:39:32ZThe British Conservative Party and the state, 1929-1940Thesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:180931e5-eb28-453c-93b8-dd6481f19e57Social policyHistory of Britain and EuropePolitical historyEducation and stateHistoryWelfare statePolitical ideologiesEconomic history--1918-1945Great Britain--Social policyHousing policyEnglishHyrax Deposit2020Prescott, WJGrimley, M<p>This thesis examines the Conservative Party’s attitude towards the role of the state between its loss of the 1929 election and the downfall of the National Government in May 1940. The appropriate extent of government intervention was one of the most important political debates in the twentieth century, and is critical to understanding the social and economic policies of a controversial decade. Despite this, how the governing Conservatives viewed the state remains neglected. Historians of 1930s Tory domestic policy have variously argued it was too interventionist, not interventionist enough, or quite reasonable. This thesis answers this question by examining an extensive range of archival and other primary sources. In doing so, it provides the first overview of the National Government’s domestic policymaking.</p> <p>The thesis has six chapters. Chapter one outlines the evolution of Conservatism from the advent of the mass electorate up to 1929. Chapter two explores the development of Conservative policy in opposition up until the party’s unexpected return to government via the multi-party National Government 1931. This is treated separately to the remaining chapters to better assess the impact being in coalition had on policymaking. For the 1931-40 period, the thesis breaks into four case studies: industrial reorganisation, welfare, housing, and education. These four topics were chosen because they were of great contemporary significance. Additionally, because the Conservatives reacted differently in each policy area, comparing them reveals where Tory ideological boundaries lay.</p> <p>This thesis argues that while most Conservatives were reluctant to turn to the state at first instance, they would at least tolerate state intervention when they believed a key institution was threatened. It further argues that while Conservatism was open to outside influences, whether from coalition partners, ex-Liberals, or civil servants, this was only where those ideas were in accordance with what they understood as Conservative principles.</p>
spellingShingle Social policy
History of Britain and Europe
Political history
Education and state
History
Welfare state
Political ideologies
Economic history--1918-1945
Great Britain--Social policy
Housing policy
Prescott, WJ
The British Conservative Party and the state, 1929-1940
title The British Conservative Party and the state, 1929-1940
title_full The British Conservative Party and the state, 1929-1940
title_fullStr The British Conservative Party and the state, 1929-1940
title_full_unstemmed The British Conservative Party and the state, 1929-1940
title_short The British Conservative Party and the state, 1929-1940
title_sort british conservative party and the state 1929 1940
topic Social policy
History of Britain and Europe
Political history
Education and state
History
Welfare state
Political ideologies
Economic history--1918-1945
Great Britain--Social policy
Housing policy
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