Description

Book Synopsis

Social enterprise and third sector activity have expanded into a prolific area of academic research and discourses over the past twenty years, with many claiming their origins rooted in Blair, New Labour and Giddens’ "Third Way". But many academic contributions lack the experience of policy implementation and do not access the wealth of grey, legacy and public policy literature from earlier periods that support different interpretations. Since most make few references to developments during the 1970s and 1980s, their narrow focus on New Labour from 1997 onwards not only neglects real antecedents, but miscasts the role of social enterprise.

During a key political period from 1998 to 2002, Blair’s New Labour Governments forced through a major conceptual shift for social enterprise, co-operative and third sector activity. Many structures, formed as community responses to massive deindustrialisation in the 1970s and 1980s, were repositioned to bid against the private sector to obtain contracts for delivery of low cost public services. Based on previously unseen archival materials and interviews with key players between 1998 and 2002, when major social enterprise and third sector policy changes occurred, Huckfield offers an alternative narrative of social enterprise in the UK, showing how local communities have been denied the restoration of local economic and social democracy.



Trade Review

'A major contribution to co-operation’s massive literature. It is ground-breaking in revealing that even in a western democracy like Britain governments can corrupt co-operatives.'
Dr Rita Rhodes, Co-op News

-- .

Table of Contents

1 Introduction
2 Background
3 Theoretical foundations and conceptual interpretations for the third sector
4 1960s–1980s regeneration
5 New Labour, co-ops and social enterprise
6 Explanations
7 Conclusions
Postscript
Appendix 1: Timeline of main literature contributions and events in the UK, North America and mainland Europe
Appendix 2: Co-operatives and social enterprises

References
Index

How Blair Killed the Co-Ops: Reclaiming Social

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    A Hardback by Leslie Huckfield

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      View other formats and editions of How Blair Killed the Co-Ops: Reclaiming Social by Leslie Huckfield

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 09/11/2021
      ISBN13: 9781526149732, 978-1526149732
      ISBN10: 1526149737

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Social enterprise and third sector activity have expanded into a prolific area of academic research and discourses over the past twenty years, with many claiming their origins rooted in Blair, New Labour and Giddens’ "Third Way". But many academic contributions lack the experience of policy implementation and do not access the wealth of grey, legacy and public policy literature from earlier periods that support different interpretations. Since most make few references to developments during the 1970s and 1980s, their narrow focus on New Labour from 1997 onwards not only neglects real antecedents, but miscasts the role of social enterprise.

      During a key political period from 1998 to 2002, Blair’s New Labour Governments forced through a major conceptual shift for social enterprise, co-operative and third sector activity. Many structures, formed as community responses to massive deindustrialisation in the 1970s and 1980s, were repositioned to bid against the private sector to obtain contracts for delivery of low cost public services. Based on previously unseen archival materials and interviews with key players between 1998 and 2002, when major social enterprise and third sector policy changes occurred, Huckfield offers an alternative narrative of social enterprise in the UK, showing how local communities have been denied the restoration of local economic and social democracy.



      Trade Review

      'A major contribution to co-operation’s massive literature. It is ground-breaking in revealing that even in a western democracy like Britain governments can corrupt co-operatives.'
      Dr Rita Rhodes, Co-op News

      -- .

      Table of Contents

      1 Introduction
      2 Background
      3 Theoretical foundations and conceptual interpretations for the third sector
      4 1960s–1980s regeneration
      5 New Labour, co-ops and social enterprise
      6 Explanations
      7 Conclusions
      Postscript
      Appendix 1: Timeline of main literature contributions and events in the UK, North America and mainland Europe
      Appendix 2: Co-operatives and social enterprises

      References
      Index

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