How are the policies, meaning and ideology of social democracy changing and what is the context for this change? To what extent are social democratic parties converging or diverging according to national traditions? What criticism are there of recent social democracy and what alternatives exist? This book offers a distinctive approach to answering these questions. By drawing on a wide range of political and ideological perspectives, the contributors have produced an interdisciplinary work of great theoretical and empirical value. They analyze developments in social democracy against the background of globalization, Europeanization and different national traditions. The perspectives range from the critical to the sympathetic, including discussion of where social democracy is going, as well as the argument that it provides no future for radical politics at all.
Notes on the Contributors
Introduction: L.Martell
Social Democracy in the Global Revolution; M.Shaw
Social Democracy and Global Governance; N.Stammers
Globalization and the Renewal of Social Democracy; M.Browne & Y.Akbar
Social Democracy and the EU: Who's Changing Who?; F.McGowan
Social Democracy in Britain? New Labour and the Third Way; N.Cowell & P.Larkin
Dutch Social Democracy and the Poldermodel; C.van der Anker
Social Democracy and Structures of Governance in Britain and Germany; C.Lees
The Media and Social Democracy in the US and Great Britain; S.Hoopes
Capitalism, Globalization and Democracy: Does Social Democracy have a Role?; L.Martell
Index
LUKE MARTELL is Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Sussex. He is author of Ecology and Society, co-editor of The Sociology of Politics and co-author of New Labour: Politics after Thatcherism. He has published articles on socialism, neo-liberalism, New Labour and social movements.