"The Centre for British Politics at Hull has become one of the leading centres for the study of British politics. This important collection of essays provides a comprehensive and insightful account of the policies and performance of the Coalition Government since 2010. It will be essential reading for all students of British politics." Professor Andrew Gamble, University of Cambridge, UK
"Electoral trends in the UK may render coalitions the norm rather than the exception, making Matt Beech's and Simon Lee's The Conservative-Liberal Coalition a particularly timely and informative contribution. Beech and Lee have gathered an impressive lineup of British politics scholars in this first comprehensive review of the politics and policy of the Coalition. Beech's insight of a coalition 'more liberal than conservative' in its ideology is counterintuitively intriguing and illuminates how austerity and the reforms of the British welfare state might prove this Coalition to be more transformational than reformist in the end. The Conservative-Liberal Coalition is the indisputable starting point for serious analysis of the legacy of the coalition and will serve to shape the debate to follow." Terrence Casey, Professor of Political Science and Head, Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, USA
"This highly readable series of essays provides astute analysis of the challenges facing the Coalition collectively, the two parties and their respective leaders. A must-read for those who want to understand the record of the Coalition, a judicious mix of politics and public policy is discussed in an informed and balanced way which nonetheless does not pull its punches about the Coalition's successes and failures." Julie Smith, University of Cambridge and House of Lords, UK
"Matt Beech and Simon Lee have once again produced an authoritative account of contemporary British politics building on the success of their previous joint-edited volumes produced under the auspices of the Centre for British Politics at the University of Hull. It is essential reading for anyone interested in the recent course of British politics between 2010 and 2015. It should be placed on all undergraduate reading lists for modules on British politics." Kevin Hickson, Senior Lecturer in Politics, University of Liverpool, UK
List of Tables and Figures The Centre for British Politics Acknowledgements Notes on Contributors 1.The Ideology of the Coalition: More Liberal than Conservative; Matt Beech 2.The Political Economy of The Coalition: Indebted and Unbalanced; Simon Lee 3.Education Policy: Consumerism and Competition; Simon Griffiths 4.Health and Social Care Reform under the Coalition; Holly Jarman and Scott L. Greer 5.The Coalition, Poverty and Social Security; Robert M. Page 6.The Coalition: How Green was My Tally?; James Connelly 7.Immigration and Housing; Rebecca Partos and Tim Bale 8.Justice, Home Affairs, Civil Liberties and Human Rights; Peter Munce 9.Parliament and the Constitution: The Coalition in Conflict; Philip Norton and Louise Thompson 10.The Condition of England under the Coalition; Simon Lee 11.The Coalition's Impact on Scotland; Margaret Arnott 12.The Coalition's Impact on Wales; Roger Scully 13.The Coalition's Impact on Northern Ireland; Cathy Gormley-Heenan and Arthur Aughey 14.Defence Under the Coalition: Maintaining Influence Under Continuing Austerity; Christopher Martin 15.Foreign Policy and International Development; Rhiannon Vickers 16.The Coalition and the European Union; Philip Lynch 17.The Coalition: A Transformative Government?; Matt Beech Index
Simon Griffiths, Lecturer in Politics, Goldsmiths, UK Holly Jarman, Assistant Professor of Health Management and Policy, University of Michigan, USA Scott L. Greer, Associate Professor of Health Management and Policy, University of Michigan, USA Robert Page, Reader in Democratic Socialism and Social Policy, University of Birmingham, UK James Connelly, Lecturer in political theory, contemporary political philosophy and environmental politics, University of Hull, UK Rebecca Partos, Researcher in Politics, University of Sussex, UK Tim Bale, Professor of Politics, Queen Mary University of London, UK Peter Munce, Centre for British Politics in the Department of Politics and International Studies, University of Hull, UK Lord Norton of Louth [Philip Norton], Professor of Government, University of Hull, UK Louise Thompson, Lecturer in British Politics, University of Surrey, UK Margaret Arnott, Professor of Public Policy, University of the West of England, UK Roger Scully, Professor of Political Science, University of Cardiff, UK Cathy Gormley-Heenan, Professor of Politics, University of Ulster, UK Arthur Aughey, Professor of Politics, University of Ulster and Senior Fellow at the Centre for British Politics, University of Hull, UK Christopher Martin, Co-Director of the Centre for Security Studies, University of Hull, UK Rhiannon Vickers, Lecturer in Politics, University of Sheffield, UK Philip Lynch, Senior Lecturer in Politics and Director of Undergraduate Studies, University of Leicester, UK