Available Formats
None Past the Post: Britain at the Polls, 2017
By (Author) Nicholas J. Allen
Edited by John Bartle
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
6th June 2018
United Kingdom
Paperback
240
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
The latest book in the long-running Britain at the Polls series provides an indispensable account of the remarkable 2017 British general election. Leading experts explain why Theresa May and the Conservatives lost their majority, and analyse how the other political parties and voters responded to the 2016 Brexit referendum and ongoing austerity. -- .
None past the post features a distinguished set of contributors, who ably parse out the factors that shaped the surprising 2017 general election. This coherent, accessible and lively volume provides essential reading that will interest students of British party politics, election campaigns, and voting behaviour.
James Adams, University of California at Davis
This book provides the authoritative, sophisticated and accessible account that is called for by the most extraordinary election of our recent history. Each chapter is a model of careful, focused analysis and finely judged interpretation. An elections significance requires an appreciation both of numbers and of history. None past the post does this superbly.
Sir Ivor Crewe, University College, Oxford
The authors tell the story of the 2017 general election in rich, compelling detail. The twists and turns of British politics and British voting behaviour are captured with the right balance, explanation and evidence to offer an illuminating, fascinating and accessible record of one of the most intriguing periods in British political history.
Jane Green, University of Manchester
The result of Britains 2017 general election was, with little doubt, one of the most dramatic and unexpected in modern British history. This latest contribution to the long-running Britain at the Polls series shines a clear light on what happened. The book is sure to become a benchmark in our understanding of this most unusual of elections.
Charles Pattie, University of Sheffield
As an American attempting to make sense of the electoral instability characterizing recent US elections, I benefited from reading the efforts of British scholars to make sense of theirs. While there are major institutional dissimilarities between our two countries and some major trends are moving in opposite directions, there are important points of political contact as well. American scholars will profit from expanding their foci and digesting these analyses of their British colleagues.
Morris P. Fiorina, Stanford University
Nicholas Allen is Reader in Politics at Royal Holloway, University of London
John Bartle is Professor of Government at the University of Essex