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Richard Crossman and the Welfare State

Richard Crossman and the Welfare State Pioneer of Welfare Provision and Labour Politics in Post-war Britain

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International Library of Political Studies

Richard Crossman and the Welfare State

Pioneer of Welfare Provision and Labour Politics in Post-war Britain

Stephen Thornton

Political Science / Public Policy / Social Services & Welfare

Generally remembered as a notorious diarist rather than a serious political figure, Richard Crossman's imposing presence in Harold Wilson's Cabinet during the 1964-1970 Labour governments proved, not least to himself, a disappointment. However, in this new reassessment, Stephen Thornton rescues Crossman's political achievements from obscurity. From 1955 to the end of his life in 1974, Crossman was committed to a radical scheme that promised to break Britain free from the existing Beveridge model of welfare provision and transform the social security regime in the UK. Although the scheme as Crossman envisaged it was not directly implemented, his actions did prompt highly significant modifications to both Labour and, more surprisingly, Conservative social security policy. Here Crossman's reputation as a towering figure of the patrician Left is rehabilitated as Thornton argues that in the era of New Labour the lessons Crossman learned from his project of welfare reform are more valuable and relevant than ever. Conclusion: Crossman's legacy.
Stephen Thornton is Lecturer in Comparative Politics in the School of European Studies at Cardiff University. He has written widely about the British Labour Party and social security policy, including work published in 'Contemporary British History' and 'Public Policy and Administration'.

Publication Date: 30 March 2009
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Imprint: I.B. Tauris
ISBN-13: 9781845118488
Format: Hardback
Page Count: 224
Weight (oz): 14.24

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