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5 oeuvres 11 utilisateurs 2 critiques

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Neil Hart is a Senior Lecturer in Economics at the University of Western Sydney, and Visiting Fellow at the Industrial Relations Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Australia. He has published extensively in the areas of the History of Economic Thought, Economic Methodology, afficher plus Post-Keynesian Economics and Macroeconomic Policy. His previous publications include Equilibrium and Evolution: Marshall and the Marshallians (2011). afficher moins

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In the late 1970s, the Brtish publisher Terence Dalton commissioned a series on the great offices of state in the British governing system. The goal was to expand general knowledge of them by offering a short, accessible study of the office and the men who held it over the years. Four volumes came out in relatively quick succession, then a lull before Neil Hart's volume, the last of the series, was published in 1987. The best of them (notably the two written by David Kynaston) provide a explanation of the office, its role in the British constitutional structure, and how that role changed over time. Unfortunately Hart's volume doesn't do this. While offering a description of the development of the position from its establishment in 1782 to the aftermath of the Second World War, Hart devotes the majority of his limited space to short studies of the key foreign secretaries and a concise summary of the focus of their policies. While useful, it fails to provide the insights into the office and the role it has played in relationship to the larger British system. For those interested in an introduction to the history of British foreign policy it is worth a read, but in the end it doesn't measure up to the high standards set by the other volumes.… (plus d'informations)
 
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MacDad | Mar 27, 2020 |
 
Signalé
xn--7xa | Apr 12, 2012 |

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Œuvres
5
Membres
11
Popularité
#857,862
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2.0
Critiques
2
ISBN
9