Tag: Westminster

Inside the Westminster Menswear Archive (PDF)


Free Download Inside the Westminster Menswear Archive by Andrew Groves, Danielle Sprecher
English | April 18, 2024 | ISBN: 1350330981, 1350330973 | True PDF | 336 pages | 500 MB
Inside the Westminster Menswear Archive is a unique guide to the role of garment archives as an industry resource for designers to research and examine both historical garments and the work of their peers.

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Inside the Westminster Menswear Archive (EPUB)


Free Download Andrew Groves, "Inside the Westminster Menswear Archive"
English | ISBN: 1350330981 | 2024 | 336 pages | EPUB | 317 MB
Inside the Westminster Menswear Archive is a unique guide to the role of garment archives as an industry resource for designers to research and examine both historical garments and the work of their peers.

(more…)

Westminster Diary A Reluctant Minister under Tony Blair


Free Download Westminster Diary: A Reluctant Minister under Tony Blair by Bernard Donoughue
English | August 30, 2016 | ISBN: 1784536504 | True EPUB | 408 pages | 3.4 MB
On 2nd May, 1997, Tony Blair swept into Downing Street, ending almost twenty years of Conservative government and beginning a decade as Prime Minister. Bernard Donoughue, a Labour peer in the House of Lords, chronicled the path to this momentous election victory in his diaries and this volume sheds new light on the process of forming government and on life working as a minister in the House of Lords.

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Westminster, Governance and the Politics of Policy Inaction ‘Do Nothing’ (2024)


Free Download Stephen Barber, "Westminster, Governance and the Politics of Policy Inaction: ‘Do Nothing’"
English | 2016 | ISBN: 1137487054 | PDF | pages: 101 | 1.2 mb
This book shows how political inaction has shaped the politics, economy and society we recognize today, despite the fact that policymakers are incentivised to act and to be seen to act decisively. Politicians make decisions which affect our lives every day but in our combative Westminster system, are usually only held to account for those which change something. But what about decisions to do nothing? What about policy which is discarded in favour of an alternative? What about opposition for naked political advantage? This book argues that not only is policy inaction an overlooked part of British politics but also that it is just as important as active policy and can have just as significant an impact on society. Addressing the topic for perhaps the first time, it offers a provocative analysis of ‘do nothing’ politics. It shows why politicians are rarely incentivized to do nothing, preferring hyperactivity. It explores the philosophical and structural drivers of inaction when it happens and highlights the contradictions in behavior. It explains why Attlee and Thatcher enjoyed lasting policy legacies to this day, and considers the nature of opposition and the challenge of holding ‘do nothing’ policy decisions to account.

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