Class and Party Divisions: Britain as a Test Case
- 1 May 1968
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Sociology
- Vol. 2 (2) , 129-162
- https://doi.org/10.1177/003803856800200201
Abstract
The relationship between occupationally working-class persons and the Labour Party since 1900 is considered in terms of the recruitment of political leaders, mobilization of working-class electors and material and symbolic policies. No consistent relationship between class and party on these three dimensions is found, nor is there evidence of a trend toward or from convergence. Secondary analysis of Gallup Poll data from the 1964 general election shows the relative influence of indices of social position other than occupational class, including that cluster of characteristics possessed by the `ideal-typical' working-class voter. Deviant case analysis and comparison of Britain with other European countries supports the hypothesis that class is important in Britain because of the composition of society (i.e., the absence of stronger grounds of cleavage) rather than because of distinctive or unique cultural values.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Social Background in Elite Analysis: A Methodological InquiryAmerican Political Science Review, 1967
- Discerning a Causal Pattern among Data on Voting BehaviorAmerican Political Science Review, 1966
- Introduction—N. D. DeakinRace, 1966
- The British General Election of 1966Published by Springer Nature ,1966
- The Civic CulturePublished by Walter de Gruyter GmbH ,1963
- British Class Consciousness and The Labour PartyThe Journal of British Studies, 1962
- The Welfare State in Historical PerspectiveEuropean Journal of Sociology, 1961
- THE ENTRY OF THE LIBERALS INTO THE, LABOUR PARTY 1910?1920Bulletin of Economic Research, 1961
- The Ethics of Trade Union LeadersBritish Journal of Sociology, 1956
- Comparative Political SystemsThe Journal of Politics, 1956