DSPO 25A60 - Public Policy Failure and the British State : A History in Twelve Case Studies

British living standards have stagnated for almost fifteen years, and on present trends will be the same as Poland's by 2030. What has gone ‘wrong' with the quality of Government in Britain? What errors and mistakes have its governments made? What lessons can be learned for other nations? Is relative British decline reversible? This interdisciplinary course will draw on intellectual traditions in history, political science, economic history and economics to explore how the Academy explains the perpetual British crisis, drawing on the course leader's research in modern British history and politics at the University of Oxford ad the subject of their PhD. Its method will be case study-based, beginning with the First World War (the conceptual, introductory topic) and passing through other ‘failures' of the British State since 1914 including Appeasement; the Suez Crisis; Concorde, the Community Charge (the ‘Poll Tax‘); Rail Privatisation; the Iraq War; and the Great Financial Crisis of 2007/8. No prior knowledge of Britain or its history and politics is required, although some insight into economic and political theory would be helpful.
Roger LEWIS
Séminaire
English
None, but some knowledge of 20th century British history and politics would be desirable
Spring 2022-2023
50% - Summative Essay 2,500 words long from a topic of the candidate's choice 20% - Presentation to class 20% - Source task undertaken in class (Week 9) 10% - Class Verbal Participation Score
A full reading list will be provided to students at the beginning of the course. Two essential texts are :
Films and documentaries will be included on the reading list.
King, Anthony and Crewe, Ivor. The Blunders of Our Governments (OneWorld, 2014)
Bacon, Richard and Hope, Christopher : Conundrum : Why Every Government Gets Things Wrong and What We Can Do About It (Biteback, 2013)