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Covers the momentous reforms in the British electoral system during the period from the Great Reform Act of 1832 to 1918 when women were given the vote. The study charts the series of Reform Acts right through the period, involving rather more attention to those important changes in the 1880s which are often underplayed.
Table des matières
Part 1 Origins; Chapter 1 Parliamentary Reform and the Historians; Chapter 2 Parliamentary Reform Agitation before 1832; Part 2 The ‘Great’ Reform Act of 1832; Chapter 3 Causes: External Pressure or Internal Collapse?; Chapter 4 Consequences: Change or Continuity?; Part 3 Redefining the ‘Privileged Pale of the Constitution’; Chapter 5 No ‘Final Solution’, 1832–65; Chapter 6 Towards Reform, 1865–68: The Causes of the ‘Leap in the Dark’; Chapter 7 Consequences: The Leap and its Aftermath, 1867–80; Chapter 8 Corruption, Reform and Redistribution, 1883–85; Part 4 Votes for Women – And Many More Men; Chapter 9 The Women’s Suffrage Campaign, 1867–1914; Chapter 10 Towards Democracy, 1910–18part5 Conclusion and Assessmentpart6 Documents;
A propos de l'auteur
Eric J. Evans
Résumé
Covers the momentous reforms in the British electoral system during the period from the Great Reform Act of 1832 to 1918 when women were given the vote. The study charts the series of Reform Acts right through the period, involving rather more attention to those important changes in the 1880s which are often underplayed.