Politics and trade in Britain, 1776-1914. Volume III, 1880-1914 / edited by Gordon Bannerman.
Politics and trade in Britain, 1776-1914.
ISBN
9781003098140 (electronic bk.)
1003098142 (electronic bk.)
9780367565183
9781000895872 (electronic bk. : PDF)
1000895874 (electronic bk. : PDF)
9781000895933 (electronic bk. : EPUB)
1000895939 (electronic bk. : EPUB)
1003098142 (electronic bk.)
9780367565183
9781000895872 (electronic bk. : PDF)
1000895874 (electronic bk. : PDF)
9781000895933 (electronic bk. : EPUB)
1000895939 (electronic bk. : EPUB)
Dil Kodu
İngilizce
Yayın Bilgisi
Abingdon : Routledge, [2024]
Fiziksel Niteleme
1 online resource (xlviii, 296 pages)
İçindekiler Notu
Volume 3: 1880-1914 General IntroductionVolume 3 Introduction1. Extract from W. Cunningham, The Growth of English Industry and Commerce in Modern Times: laissez faire2. Editorial on Mr. Wheelhouse⁰́₉s Parliamentary Motion, Huddersfield Daily Chronicle 3. ⁰́₈British Trade with France⁰́₉, Glasgow Herald4. H. E. Crum-Ewing to Earl Granville, 29 November 1880, H. E. Crum-Ewing to Joseph Chamberlain, 29 November 1880, Evelyn Ashley to Messrs. Monteith & Kelly, 2 December 1880, Evelyn Ashley to T. D. Hill, 2 December 1880 5. ⁰́₈The Sugar Bounties Question. Professor Fawcett, Lord Derby, and Mr. Stewart M. P. on Bounties⁰́₉6. ⁰́₈Commercial Treaties⁰́₉, Newcastle Courant7. Memorial of the Association of Chambers of Commerce of the United Kingdom. To the Right Honourable Earl Granville, K.G., Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, 8 June 1881, in Representations from Chambers of Commerce and other commercial associations relative to the proposed new Commercial Treaty with France and the French tariff.8. ⁰́₈Fair Trade⁰́₉, North-Eastern Daily Gazette for Middlesborough9. ⁰́₈The Protectionists⁰́₉ New Departure⁰́₉, Pall Mall Gazette: An Evening Newspaper and Review10. Extract from Agatha Ramm (ed.), The Political Correspondence of Mr. Gladstone and Lord Granville, 1876-188611. ⁰́₈Mr. Gladstone and the National Fair Trade League⁰́₉, Leeds Mercury; Morning Post12. Samuel Duncan to Winston Churchill, 19 October 190313. ⁰́₈Fair Trade meeting in the City of London⁰́₉, Hampshire Advertiser14. Extracts from Fair-Trade: a Weekly Journal devoted to Industry and Commerce15. ⁰́₈The Government Defeat⁰́₉, Fair-Trade: a Weekly Journal devoted to Industry and Commerce16. ⁰́₈Fair Trade⁰́₉, Daily News17. ⁰́₈Election results⁰́₉, Fair-Trade: a Weekly Journal devoted to Industry and Commerce18. ⁰́₈The Fair Trade Bubble Pricked⁰́₉, The North-Eastern Daily Gazette for Middlesborough19. Peripatetic, ⁰́₈The National "Fair Trade League"⁰́₉, Cambridge Independent Press and University Herald20. Samuel Cunliffe Lister, England⁰́₉s Folly: a paper read before the Silk Section of the Jubilee Exhibition, at Manchester, 21 October, 1887 21. Extract from ⁰́₈Lord R. Churchill on Fair Trade⁰́₉, Standard22. Lord Salisbury to George Goschen, 18 November 188723. ⁰́₈Conservative Conference at Oxford: the Free Trade Question⁰́₉, Essex Standard 24. ⁰́₈John Bright ⁰́₃ Past and Present⁰́₉, Reynolds⁰́₉s Newspaper25. Harry Quelch, ⁰́₈Protection and Poverty⁰́₉, Justice26. Goldwin Smith to Lord Farrer, 22 and 30 June 189227. ⁰́₈Lord Salisbury⁰́₉s attitude to Free Trade⁰́₉, Pall Mall Gazette 28. Extract from F. P. de Labilliere, Federal Britain; or, Unity and Federation of the Empire29. ⁰́₈Mr. Keir Hardie on the Labour Party⁰́₉, Birmingham Daily Post; ⁰́₈Labour Politics⁰́₉, Reynolds⁰́₉s Newspaper30. J. H. Round, ⁰́₈The Protectionist Revival⁰́₉31. Goldwin Smith to Lord Farrer, 28 July 1896; Lord Farrer to Goldwin Smith, 9 August 1896; Goldwin Smith to Lord Farrer, 22 September 189632. Sidney Low, ⁰́₈The Decline of Cobdenism⁰́₉33. Lawrence C. Tipper to Winston S. Churchill, 3 November 1902 & Lord Dudley to Winston Churchill, 9 November 190234. ⁰́₈A Tariff League: Important Declarations⁰́₉, Henley Advertiser35. J. A. Hobson, ⁰́₈The Inner Meaning of Protectionism⁰́₉36. Charles Ritchie to Winston Churchill, 1 June 1903 & Lord Hugh Cecil to Winston S. Churchill, 3 June 1903 37. Extract from Beatrice Webb Typescript Diary, 2 January 1901-10 February 191138. ⁰́₈The Man in the Street and Mr. Chamberlain⁰́₉ and ⁰́₈Our Walking Inquirers⁰́₉, Daily Mail39. ⁰́₈The Food Taxes in East Anglia⁰́₉ and ⁰́₈Our Walking Inquirers⁰́₉, Daily Mail40. Alexander M. Thompson, ⁰́₈The Trade Union Congress⁰́₉; Fred Knee, ⁰́₈The Trades Union Congress⁰́₉41. George Bernard Shaw, Fabianism and the Fiscal Question: an Alternative Policy 42. ⁰́₈Prime Minister⁰́₉s Manifesto: Address to Stirling Electors: Record of the Late Government⁰́₉; ⁰́₈Free Fooders⁰́₉ Election Addresses: the bogus cry of Home Rule⁰́₉; ⁰́₈Mr. Loe Strachey on the issue⁰́₉, Westminster Gazette43. Lord Lansdowne to Arthur Balfour, 28 January & 4 February 1906 44. J. Bruce Glasier, ⁰́₈The Old Toryism⁰́₉45. Extract from W. A. S. Hewins, The Apologia of an Imperialist: Forty Years of the Empire Policy46. Extract from W. A. S. Hewins, The Apologia of an Imperialist: Forty Years of the Empire Policy47. Editorial, Morning Post48. J. Keir Hardie, ⁰́₈Foreword⁰́₉ in A. Cobden-Sanderson, Richard Cobden, and the Land of the People 49. Tariff Reform League, ⁰́₈Introduction: the Policy of the Tariff Reform League⁰́₉50. Extract from Beatrice Webb Typescript Diary, 2 January 1901-10 February 1911.51. W. A. S. Hewins, ⁰́₈Tariff Reform and the Political Situation⁰́₉52. ⁰́₈What Lancashire Thinks⁰́₉, Jarrow Express & Tyneside Advertiser53. ⁰́₈No Referendum on Tariff Reform: Mr. Bonar Law on Unionist Policy. The Truth as to Food Duties, Agreement with the Colonies, No Increase in Cost of Living⁰́₉, London Evening Standard 54. ⁰́₈Method and Principle: Tariff Reform League & Edinburgh Policy⁰́₉, The Globe55. Letter of ⁰́₈Free Trader⁰́₉, Wiltshire Times and Trowbridge Advertiser 56. ⁰́₈Politicians all Patriots⁰́₉, West London Observer: the County Paper for Middlesex and SurreyIndex
Özet, vb.
The period between 1880 and 1914, the subject of this volume, sees increasing questioning of free trade, especially in those sectors impacted adversely by foreign competition, and within political circles, where the notion of protecting native industries shifted from an agricultural to an industrial base. There was a greater willingness, especially in the Conservative party, to consider it as a viable policy. The ⁰́₈constituencies⁰́₉ or interest groups created by free trade however defended it fiercely among the Liberal party and in manufacturing industries, primarily those highly dependent on export markets. Debates on commercial policy in this period had another dimension which had been subsidiary in earlier periods⁰́₄the colonial empire and the economic, political, and cultural ties with it promoted. The period between 1880 and 1914 was one where the language of empire was at its height and the economic relationship between the Mother Country and the colonies entered political debate in a forceful way. The sources include several petitions from parliamentary papers attacking the system of commercial treaties pursued by the British government. Towards this end, extracts from the journal Fair Trade, and a body of newspaper material detailing extra-parliamentary movements against free trade, from the Leeds Mercury, Glasgow Herald, Pall Mall Gazette, and Daily Mail, are also included. Making the transition to the early twentieth century and the rise of the labour movement, printed sources such as Fabian tracts on tariff reform, as well as material from the International Free Trade Congress, are incorporated.
Konu
HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain __ bisacsh
POLITICAL SCIENCE / History & Theory __ bisacsh
Great Britain __ Commercial policy.
Great Britain __ Foreign economic relations.
Great Britain __ Economic policy.
Great Britain __ Politics and government.
POLITICAL SCIENCE / History & Theory __ bisacsh
Great Britain __ Commercial policy.
Great Britain __ Foreign economic relations.
Great Britain __ Economic policy.
Great Britain __ Politics and government.
Diğer Yazarlar
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