1st Edition

The Making of the Conservative Party’s Immigration Policy

By Rebecca Partos Copyright 2019
    200 Pages
    by Routledge

    199 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book explains the development of the Conservative Party’s immigration policy during the seven decades since 1945, up to today. By bringing together existing theories from the fields of political science and migration studies, this book offers a new model of party policy-making, which could be modified and tested in other contexts.

    Grounded in rigorous scholarship, but of interest to general readers as well as specialists and students, this book provides a thoughtful and engaging account of the making of modern Britain. The book draws on 30 interviews with figures who were at the heart of policy-making, from Kenneth Clarke and Douglas Hurd, to Damian Green and Gavin Barwell, to reveal that the ‘national mood’ often has more impact on policy-making than the empirics of the situation.

    This book will be of key interest to scholars, students and readers interested in British politics; immigration and migration studies; Conservative Party politics; and, more broadly, public policy, political parties and European and comparative politics.

    1. Introduction

    2. No Need for Policy? 1945 to 1964

    3. Time to Legislate: 1964 to 1979

    4. A Problem with No Solution: 1979 to 1997

    5. Odd, Silly Policies: 1997 to 2015

    6. Conclusion

    Biography

    Rebecca Partos is a senior analyst in the UK Civil Service, with experience of UK immigration analysis.