Unit name | The Politics of the Contemporary Labour Party |
---|---|
Unit code | POLIM0035 |
Credit points | 20 |
Level of study | M/7 |
Teaching block(s) |
Teaching Block 1 (weeks 1 - 12) |
Unit director | Professor. Wickham-Jones |
Open unit status | Not open |
Pre-requisites |
Students will be unable to take this Unit if they have already taken the equivalent H level unit POLI30024 |
Co-requisites |
None |
School/department | School of Sociology, Politics and International Studies |
Faculty | Faculty of Social Sciences and Law |
PLEASE NOTE – this unit is only available for students registered on MSci Politics with Quantitative Research Methods or MSci Sociology with Quantitative Research Methods.
This unit will examine the contemporary politics of the Labour Party. In particular it will focus on the nature of the party’s leadership and the role of senior figures in shaping Labour’s policy commitments, electoral outlook, and organizational structure. The unit will look in depth at relationships within the party including those between the leadership and different elements of it such as the parliamentary party, grassroots constituency parties, and the affiliated unions. It will assess a number of scholarly debates about the developments that have taken place to Labour politics over the last few years. It will ask such questions as how does the party’s leadership process work? What groups exist within the Parliamentary Labour Party? What is the role of Labour’s grassroots membership? What is Labour’s electoral strategy? Where does power lie in the contemporary Labour party?
The unit aims to allow students:
On successful completion of the unit, students will be able to demonstrate:
• An intricate and detailed knowledge of some recent developments to the Labour party, placed in a historical context, including such matters as its leadership, its policy programme, its electoral outlook and its organisational structure, and an ability to assess those developments in a critical fashion including the deployment of a wide range of evidence and data;
• A detailed and sophisticated understanding of academic debates about the current politics of the Labour Party;
• A nuanced awareness of the variety of complex material available on Labour party politics in recent years, including primary source and a capacity to offer an advanced and comprehensive evaluation of such material.
One 2 hour seminar and one 1 hour lecture per week
Both components assess all learning outcomes
Context will be provided by:
Tim Bale, Five Year Mission (Oxford University Press, 2015)
Eunice Goes, The Labour Party under Ed Miliband (Manchester University Press, 2015)
Lewis Minkin, The Blair Supremacy (Manchester University Press, 2014)
Most of the substantive material thereafter will come from electronic journals such as Political Quarterly, British Politics, Renewal, and The British Journal of Politics and International Affairs. For example:
Peter Dorey and Andrew Denham, ‘The Longest Suicide Vote in History’, The Labour Party Leadership Election of 2015’, British Politics, vol. 11, no. 3, 259-282.
Hugh Pemberton and Mark Wickham-Jones, ‘Factionalism in the Parliamentary Labour Party and the 2015 leadership contest’, Renewal, vol. 23, no. 3, 2015, 5-21
Thomas Quinn, ‘The British Labour Party’s leadership election of 2015’, The British Journal of Politics and International Relations, vol. 18, no. 4 (November 2016), 759-778.
Steve Richards, ‘Leadership, loyalty and the rise of Jeremy Corbyn’, The Political Quarterly, vol 87, no .1 (January-Maerch 2016), 12-17.
Richard Seymour, Corbyn: The Strange Rebirth of Radical Politics (Verso, 2016)
James Stafford, ‘The Corbyn Experiment’, Dissent, Winter 2016.
This is a research-based unit which will make use of on-going scholarship, drawing largely from journals.