Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

All Outputs (15)

The 2010–15 coalition government and the legacy of free schools in England (2023)
Journal Article
Williams, B. (2023). The 2010–15 coalition government and the legacy of free schools in England. Policy Futures in Education, https://doi.org/10.1177/14782103231176360

Free schools were a flagship policy of the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition (2010–15), aligned with the broader academisation programme, yet both consolidating and transcending New Labour’s educational narrative between 1997 and 2010. Driven b... Read More about The 2010–15 coalition government and the legacy of free schools in England.

Black Wednesday: thirty years on (2022)
Journal Article
Williams, B. (in press). Black Wednesday: thirty years on. Political Insight, 13(3), 22-25. https://doi.org/10.1177/20419058221127468

When the definitive history of recent decades in British politics comes to be written, Wednesday, 16 September 1992 will likely be a standout date. That day – dubbed ‘Black Wednesday’ – Britain was forced to withdraw from the Exchange Rate Mechanism... Read More about Black Wednesday: thirty years on.

The ‘New Right’ and its legacy for British conservatism (2021)
Journal Article
Williams, B. (2021). The ‘New Right’ and its legacy for British conservatism. Journal of Political Ideologies, https://doi.org/10.1080/13569317.2021.1979139

New Right theories have had a major impact on British politics since the emergence of Thatcherism and the end of the so-called ‘years of consensus’ in the mid-1970s. In radically rejecting the conventions of postwar politics in terms of the managemen... Read More about The ‘New Right’ and its legacy for British conservatism.

Factions and splits in British politics (2021)
Journal Article
Williams, B., & Hickson, K. (2021). Factions and splits in British politics. Political Insight, 12(1), 16-19. https://doi.org/10.1177/20419058211000997

Four decades on from the formation of the Social Democratic Party, Ben Williams and Kevin Hickson explore how factionalism and in-fighting have sculpted the shape of British party politics.

Strangled at birth : the One Nation ideology of Theresa May (2020)
Journal Article
Hickson, K., Page, R., & Williams, B. (2020). Strangled at birth : the One Nation ideology of Theresa May. Journal of Political Ideologies, 25(3), 334-350. https://doi.org/10.1080/13569317.2020.1773074

Contemporary and retrospective evaluation of Theresa May’s premiership inevitably focuses on the division, drift and indecision which characterized it. However, this article argues that although such narratives have considerable validity, they miss a... Read More about Strangled at birth : the One Nation ideology of Theresa May.

The Big Society : ten years on (2019)
Journal Article
Williams, B. (2019). The Big Society : ten years on. Political Insight, 10(4), 22-25. https://doi.org/10.1177/2041905819891369

David Cameron attempted to make a more caring, socially-conscious Conservatism his flagship policy. But did the ‘Big Society’ ever really come to pass? Ben Williams examines the evidence a decade on.

Thatcher breaks consensus (2019)
Journal Article
Williams, B. (2019). Thatcher breaks consensus. History today, 69(7), 76-81

Assessing Margaret Thatcher’s premiership: a radical decade and a divisive legacy. When asked who has been the most controversial and radical postwar British prime minister, many historians and academics incline towards Margaret Thatcher. Taking offi... Read More about Thatcher breaks consensus.

Austerity Britain – a brief history (2019)
Journal Article
Williams, B. (2019). Austerity Britain – a brief history. Political Insight, 10(1), 16-19. https://doi.org/10.1177/2041905819838148

Austerity has been a recurring theme of post-war British politics, from the 1950s right up to the present day. But with voters increasingly weary after a decade of public spending reduction, Ben Williams looks back on the modern history of austerity.

Brexit : the links between domestic and foreign policy (2018)
Journal Article
Williams, B. (2018). Brexit : the links between domestic and foreign policy. Political Insight, 9(2), 36-39. https://doi.org/10.1177/2041905818779334

The UK’s vote to leave the EU was as much a product of divisions within the Conservative party as wider concerns about Britain’s relationship with Europe. Ben Williams explores the often complex relationship between domestic and foreign policy and it... Read More about Brexit : the links between domestic and foreign policy.

Theresa May’s premiership : continuity or change? (2017)
Journal Article
Williams, B. (2017). Theresa May’s premiership : continuity or change?. Political Insight, 8(1), 10-13. https://doi.org/10.1177/2041905817702730

Theresa May promised a fresh approach to government but how distinctive is she from her predecessors? Ben Williams analyses the Prime Minister’s administration and finds some striking similarities – and differences – with Conservative governments pas... Read More about Theresa May’s premiership : continuity or change?.

Tory ideology and social policy under Theresa May : current and future directions (2017)
Journal Article
Williams, B. (2017). Tory ideology and social policy under Theresa May : current and future directions. Renewal, 25(3-4),

Theresa May has sought to construct a distinctive social policy offering during her time as Prime Minister, but remains stymied by a toxic combination of triangulation and austerity. Labour must demonstrate the vacuity and incoherence at the heart of... Read More about Tory ideology and social policy under Theresa May : current and future directions.