
Contents
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Looking at Thatcherism afresh Looking at Thatcherism afresh
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What was (or is) Thatcherism? What was (or is) Thatcherism?
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The temporality of Thatcherism The temporality of Thatcherism
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Thatcherism: from an implementation perspective to an impact perspective Thatcherism: from an implementation perspective to an impact perspective
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The key questions The key questions
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An applied example An applied example
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Problematizing periodization Problematizing periodization
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A cascade theory of policy radicalism A cascade theory of policy radicalism
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References References
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Commentary: Women, the family and contemporary Conservative party politics: from Thatcher to Cameron
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1 Interrogating and Conceptualizing the Legacy of Thatcherism
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Published:February 2014
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Abstract
This chapter reflects on the debates surrounding Thatcherism with the benefit of hindsight. Most commentators seem to accept that Thatcherism is now a historic concept—referring, if not exactly to the period 1979–90, then certainly to events now largely concluded. This allows us a degree of historical perspective that was previously unavailable. Current assessments by political scientists of the rise of ‘New Labour’ and of the development of the British state in the post-war period have had to grapple with this period (and, indeed, 1997). But there are other reasons for returning to Thatcherism and perhaps even for preferring the term ‘Thatcherism’ to the more recent ‘neo-liberalism’. ‘Thatcherism’—however hard it remains to offer a strict definition—embraced more than just neo-liberal ideas. Thatcherism combined both neo-liberal and neo-conservative strands and was often at its more radical and consequential when it identified policy targets which combined elements of both.
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