Description

Book Synopsis
Britain''s leading railway historian provides a critical examination of the Blair governments'' involvement in the rail industry from 1997 as they attempted to deal with the UK''s fragmented, privatized railways.The book focuses particularly on the work of the Strategic Rail Authority (SRA), and considers the role of individuals - John Prescott, Stephen Byers, Alistair Darling, Sir Alastair Morton, and Richard Bowker - and events - the Hatfield accident (2000), the demise of Railtrack (2001-2), and the funding crisis of 2003-4 - in the shaping of emerging policy.The book was commissioned by the SRA, and written with access to government files. Dr Gourvish argues that the establishment of the SRA as a Non-Departmental Public Board proved largely unsuccessful. It produced tensions with the industry''s existing institutions - Railtrack/Network Rail, the operating companies and the economic regulator. There were some gains from the experiment, notably the rescue of the West Coast Main Line

Table of Contents
1. Labour's Response to the Privatized Railway, 1993-8 ; 2. Labour's Vision: the Strategic Rail Authority and a Ten Year Plan, 1998-2000 ; 3. The Hatfield Watershed, 2000-1 ; 4. The Strategic Rail Authority and Railtrack after Hatfield ; 5. The Strategic Rail Authority and the Railway, 2001-4: The Strategic Vision ; 6. The Strategic Rail Authority and the Railway, 2001-4: Network Rail, Cost Escalation, the Regulator's 2003 Review, and Project Management ; 7. The Rail Review and its Aftermath, 2004-5 ; 8. Conclusion

Britains Railways 19972005 Labours Strategic Experiment

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    A Hardback by Terry Gourvish

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      View other formats and editions of Britains Railways 19972005 Labours Strategic Experiment by Terry Gourvish

      Publisher: Oxford University Press
      Publication Date: 10/16/2008 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780199236602, 978-0199236602
      ISBN10: 0199236607

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Britain''s leading railway historian provides a critical examination of the Blair governments'' involvement in the rail industry from 1997 as they attempted to deal with the UK''s fragmented, privatized railways.The book focuses particularly on the work of the Strategic Rail Authority (SRA), and considers the role of individuals - John Prescott, Stephen Byers, Alistair Darling, Sir Alastair Morton, and Richard Bowker - and events - the Hatfield accident (2000), the demise of Railtrack (2001-2), and the funding crisis of 2003-4 - in the shaping of emerging policy.The book was commissioned by the SRA, and written with access to government files. Dr Gourvish argues that the establishment of the SRA as a Non-Departmental Public Board proved largely unsuccessful. It produced tensions with the industry''s existing institutions - Railtrack/Network Rail, the operating companies and the economic regulator. There were some gains from the experiment, notably the rescue of the West Coast Main Line

      Table of Contents
      1. Labour's Response to the Privatized Railway, 1993-8 ; 2. Labour's Vision: the Strategic Rail Authority and a Ten Year Plan, 1998-2000 ; 3. The Hatfield Watershed, 2000-1 ; 4. The Strategic Rail Authority and Railtrack after Hatfield ; 5. The Strategic Rail Authority and the Railway, 2001-4: The Strategic Vision ; 6. The Strategic Rail Authority and the Railway, 2001-4: Network Rail, Cost Escalation, the Regulator's 2003 Review, and Project Management ; 7. The Rail Review and its Aftermath, 2004-5 ; 8. Conclusion

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