Theunemployed

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Theunemployed Page Six THE DAILY WORKER THE DMiy WOBKER. Lessons of the Danish General Zinoviev Reports to the Russian Communist Party Published by the DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING o©. Strike garla is characteristic of the political lizasion. Stabilization will last a cer- the contradictions of capitalism are UU W. Washington Bird.. Chicago. DL The mighty role that the transport workers can TV/TOSCOW, April 29—(By Mall).— stabilization. tain period of time, but the above today greater than before the war. (Phone: Monroa 4712) necessary fill in the world-wide struggle between exploiters At today’s evening session Com- tTIHE unparalelled lies whloh the facts illustrate the character of this It is to differentiate be- Bulgarian government spread stabilization. Many votes cast for tween the stabilization of capitalism SUBSCRIPTION RATES and workers is shown clearly in the aid promised rade Zinoviev delivered a report on against Soviet Russia, Immediately Hindenburg represent a protest of and the stabilization of the Sovie By mall: the Danish workers, now engaged in a general the results of the enlarged executive hatred against Versailles peace Union. gar year month* after the Sofia outrage, have already the NM *3.60....6 months sl.o#—S Speaking rapprochement By mall (In Chicago only): strike, by the Norwegian transport workers and session of the Communist Interna- been disproved., It remains a fact treaty. The direct result of the elec- of the be- 11.00 par year 34.50.-8 month* 22.60—3 month* which may be followed by similar action in Sweden, tional. Pointing out that the plenum however, that no country can be tion will be the growth of revolution- tween the British and Russian trade Germany, Holland and Finland. had the character of a congress, Zino- ruled against the will of the workers ary sentiment in Germany. unions, Comrade Zinoviev stated that Address all mall and make out check* to viev declared that the resolutions will soon there is in England, for the According dispatches, and peasants, and that the class social-democrats first time, THE DAILY WORKER to the Norwegian sailors adopted by the plenum were extreme- struggle in Bulgaria is permeated with THEmake their peace with Hinden- a general revolutionary situation. The IIIS W. Washington Blvd. Chicago, mini* and doekworkers have agreed to handle ho Danish ly Important for the Russian Com- civil war. burg; not the proletariat however. rapprochement between the trade shipping until the demands of the Danish workers munist Party, not only as a section German furnished This election may be expected to have unions follows the line of historical LOUIS ENODAHL rpHE elections 3. f of the Comintern, but as a party that * international results. development; hence the great signi- \ are met and there are good prospects of the boycott another example of political stabi- some serious WILLIAM F. DUNNE rules great country. ficance of the united front tactics. J. LOEB Baslneea Manager a lization. Comrade Zinoviev relates In Germany’s relations with France and MORITZ extending to all the ports in the countries men- speaker The plenum established the rela- detail that the executive had proposed Poland will not be improved, but even- The then declares that the tioned above. by as aacond-claes mall Sept. 21, 1922, at tha Poet- tion of the Comintern to the retarded to the German delegation to enter into tually sharpened. The situation Is view entertained some that the ■stared development revolution, and fact of stabilization Office at Chicago, 111., under tha act of March 3, 1879. Transport is to capitalism wliat the heart, veins of the an election compromise with the Ger- wrought with troubles and dangers. means that capitalism. and arteries are to the human body. It cannot the partial stabilization of man social-democrats, whereby the There Is also the danger of a change Trotsky was correct in his analysis, Adrartlalng rate* oa appucatlas This fact has been caught up by the the to be false. The differences did not live if the circulation system is clogged. Just as Communist Party was to refrain from in German policy towards Soviet Second International, and was mis- putting Union. Stabiliation is there, but many turn about this question, but on the the average human being abuses this vital of up a candidate of its own in part interpreted to mean that the exe- the second election, voting under cer- symptoms show that this stabilization question of the tactics to be adopted by proletarian party the anatomy, so are the transport workers abused cutive of the Comintern had announ- tain conditions, for Braun, the social- is insecure. Reaction is on the up- a in such a situa- Lee and the Left Wing cap- by the bosses and among the lowest paid hardest ced the complete stabilization of democratic candidate. grade in Europe. tion. dvents that have From the company union known as the “B. and worked and consequently most militant sections of italism. Certain The majority of the German dele- to stabilization, there are in JN connection with the Czecho-Slo- taken place since- -the enlarged exe- DUEour of right vakian party, the speaker states O. plan” on one railroad system, established after the working class. gation agreed with this proposal, but movement a number cutive session, stu)w the real charac- the executive had only formulated tendencies and ultra-left dangers. The that the crisis has been overcome, and the strike in 1922, when the morale of the Bulgaria \iilway Their weakness lies in the division of their ter of the stabilization. and the general policy, leaving its prac- somewhat unclear formulation of the that the resignations in Brunn only was low point, the class peace examples economic healthy the workers at a forces by national and sectional lines—a weakness Germany are of tical execution to the German Com- enlarged executive must be made contribute to the development policy of the trade union officialdom has extended that the transport workers of the Red Interna- stabilization. The French ministerial munist Party. clear to the effect that a general revo- of the party. railways and a number crisis was no ordinary crisis; it arose In the meantime the social-demo- lutionary situation must be dlfferent- rpHE plenum had dealt with the to Canadian government tional of Labor Unions realized long ago and -*- out of the financiAl- crisls. had withdrawn their candidate, ed form an immediate revolutionary agrarian question and with the of roads on this side of the line. which they out overcome. The first crats set to step was impending' danger of an in- Supporting the capitalist, candidate situation. The charlatans of the Sec- policy of the Comintern. Events have Now comes William Lee, head of the* Brother- an effort to unify all transport unions a declare that the shown the policy pursued by the Rus- around THEflation in Franpq suddenly threat- Marx,—in return, for which, Braun ond International hood of Railway with the proposal to any Communist Party in the Comin- Trainmen, common program of minimum demands, the second ened a repetition of the social crisis was to become (prime minister in plenum had not registered revolu- sian hold a conference of railway managers and railway was their active support of the drive fpr world experienced by Germany in 1923. The Prussia. tionary situation at all. This is a tern to be correct. The immediate merely Party union officials to launch a “no movement in crisis overcome by a banking In gjaxony, many thousands of so falsehood. The plenum had task of the Russian Communist strike” trade union unity. dally scheme which coyqred the deficit of cial-democratic workers voted for established the fact that there was is to adapt its work with the the entire industry. With characteristic energy With the example of the need for international revolutionry At the pres- four milliards. Thaellman, refusing to vote for the no immediately situation. international movement. the imperialists are evidently insisting upon re- to solidarity furnished by the Danish strike, and the However, there remains a deficit of capitalist candidate,—which goes to Since the bourgeoisie is unable ent moment the Comintern needs especially support sults from their agents in the trade unions. evidence of a real belief in its necessity shown by 20 milliards. characteristics of show that there was no psychological solve its conflicts from above, the si- the moral of the Theiie, revolutionary. Party, is This movement is planned on a stupendous scale. the French stabilization are particu- basis for casting the votes for Marx. tuation remains Russian Communist which the Norwegian, Swedish, Finnish, German and beginning of an and remains the party of international would include workers larly significant, because France is a election of Hindenburg is the are only at the If successful it 2,000,000 Dutch transport workers, the Marine Transport revolutions, proletarian revolution. (Applause). victor country. The situation in Bui THEfirst historical illustration of stabl- WEera of wars and and in the most important key industry and introduce 1 'Workers of the 1.W.W., as the most militant group the company union system on a national basis. in the American industry, should now take the lead The ability to organize and strike is the test of in the United States among transport workers in 800 COAL MINERS FLEE FOR LIVES the right strike WORKERS a labor union. To surrender to support of the movement for world trade union JOB SELLERS IN 40 CHICAGO and substitute class co-operation for the class unity, in which the British and Russian unions AS BLACK DAMP OVERCOMES struggle, no matter how vague its conception may have taken the lead internationally.
Recommended publications
  • Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Intelligence
    Russia • Military / Security Historical Dictionaries of Intelligence and Counterintelligence, No. 5 PRINGLE At its peak, the KGB (Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti) was the largest HISTORICAL secret police and espionage organization in the world. It became so influential DICTIONARY OF in Soviet politics that several of its directors moved on to become premiers of the Soviet Union. In fact, Russian president Vladimir V. Putin is a former head of the KGB. The GRU (Glavnoe Razvedvitelnoe Upravleniye) is the principal intelligence unit of the Russian armed forces, having been established in 1920 by Leon Trotsky during the Russian civil war. It was the first subordinate to the KGB, and although the KGB broke up with the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, the GRU remains intact, cohesive, highly efficient, and with far greater resources than its civilian counterparts. & The KGB and GRU are just two of the many Russian and Soviet intelli- gence agencies covered in Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Intelligence. Through a list of acronyms and abbreviations, a chronology, an introductory HISTORICAL DICTIONARY OF essay, a bibliography, and hundreds of cross-referenced dictionary entries, a clear picture of this subject is presented. Entries also cover Russian and Soviet leaders, leading intelligence and security officers, the Lenin and Stalin purges, the gulag, and noted espionage cases. INTELLIGENCE Robert W. Pringle is a former foreign service officer and intelligence analyst RUSSIAN with a lifelong interest in Russian security. He has served as a diplomat and intelligence professional in Africa, the former Soviet Union, and Eastern Europe. For orders and information please contact the publisher && SOVIET Scarecrow Press, Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • Active Measures: the Secret History of Disinformation & Political
    Active Measures: The Secret History of Disinformation & Political Warfare | Thomas Rid Philosophers have only interpreted the world. The point, May 25th, 2020 however, is to change it. — Karl Marx INTRODUCTION Thomas Rid is Professor of Strategic Studies at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies. Rid’s latest book, Active Measures, a startling history of disinformation, was published in late April 2020 with Farrar, Straus and Giroux (also in Russian, Japanese, Polish). His most recent book, Rise of the Machines (2016), tells the sweeping story of how cybernetics, a late- 1940s theory of machines, came to incite anarchy and war (also in Chinese, Russian, German, Japanese, Turkish). His 2015 article “Attributing Cyber Attacks” was designed to explain, guide, and improve the identification of network breaches (Journal of Strategic Studies 2015). In 2013 he published the widely-read book Cyber War Will Not Take Place. Rid’s Ph.D. thesis, “War and Media Operations: The US Military and the Press from Vietnam to Iraq,” was the first academic analysis of the role of embedded media in the 2003 Iraq War, providing a concise history of US military public affairs management since Vietnam. Rid testified on information security in front of the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence as well as in the German Bundestag and the UK Parliament. From 2011 to 2016, Rid was a professor in the Department of War Studies at King’s College London. Between 2003 and 2010, he worked at major think tanks in Berlin, Paris, Jerusalem, and Washington, DC. Rid holds a PhD from Humboldt University in Berlin.
    [Show full text]
  • The Soviet Union and the British General Strike of 1926 Alastair Kocho-Williams University of the West of England, Bristol [email protected]
    The Soviet Union and the British General Strike of 1926 Alastair Kocho-Williams University of the West of England, Bristol [email protected] This paper addresses the Soviet analysis and response to the British General Strike of 1926 in the light of newly available documents. The recently discovered and published stenograms of Politburo meetings provide new information concerning Soviet politics and the political process. Previously, scholars have had only Soviet official documents and protocols of Politburo meetings, which only detail participants with a brief summary of decisions (vypuski) along with who received these summaries.1 From the protocols, and other sources, scholars were aware that verbatim stenograms existed, some of which were published and distributed to Central Committee members and other party leaders with instructions for them to be returned after they had been read.2 Amongst the ‘lost Politburo stenograms’ is the record of a lengthy, heated, discussion of the ‘lessons of the British General Strike’ on 3 June 1926.3 It is this that the current paper is chiefly concerned with, detailing the Soviet stance towards the General Strike, inconsistency in the Soviet analysis, the extent to which Soviet internal politics was linked to foreign policy, how as senior figures disagreed factions developed around divisions in policy, and the way in which the handling of the international situation formed a strand of the opposition to Stalin and the Politburo majority in 1926.4 The British General Strike ran from 4-12 May 1926. Although it drew British industry to a halt, and hadn’t been planned much in advance, there had been ample warning of a coming labour dispute, of which the British and Soviet Governments were well aware, although the Soviets had concluded that major action was unlikely I am grateful to Paul Gregory and Alexander Vatlin for their assistance in the writing of this paper.
    [Show full text]
  • Zinoviev Letter
    rS8 The Political Police in Britain and more sensitive role now being undertaken by MI5 in industry and socialist movements. Its work now 'called for new techniques and, above all, for a new type of agenr who could infiltrate among rhe workers without arousing suspicion.'16 On several occasions prior to this the Special Branch and MI5 had come under attack in parliament. This usually occurred when the an- nual Secret Service Vote for 'the foreign and other secret services' came up for consideration. In rgrS the sum agreed to was €46,84o; in r9r8-r9 it was €r,r5o,ooo and in rgrgF?o some €4oo,ooo. In Decem- ber rgrg a supplemenary sum of €2oo,ooo was agreed by parliament, and one MP took the opportupity to ask a question. Mr A. Short: Apart from the use of that service as a diplomaric weapon, there was a growing volume of opinion, particularly among the organised working class, that the fund was being used fbr purposes alien to its usual purposes. Mr Baldwin replied: He had no knowledge of theway inwhich the money was sPent.r? And again in May lgto the Chancellor, Mr Chamberlain, declined to give details of the Secret Service Vote. Captain Benn: asked if the Secret Service had not in retent years altered lrom being a purely military service to being a political service. Mr Chamberlain: said he was not aware ofany such change; but ifhe were to answer even harmless questions, the service would cease to besecret...r8 On 8 October lg?4 the 12[6rrr government was defeated in the I{ouse of Commons because of its withdrawal o[ the prosecurion againstJohn Campbell, the acting editor of the Communist Partyjour- nal, Worhers Weeh$.
    [Show full text]
  • Disinformation Warfares in World Politics: Russian Campaigns and Western Counteraction
    WORKING PAPER [WP-04/2018] Disinformation warfares in world politics: Russian campaigns and Western counteraction Alejandro Jesús Palacios Jiménez International Relations students, University of Manuel Lamela Gallego Navarra; junior research assistants, Center for Martín Biera Muriel Global Affairs & Strategic Studies Junio 26, 2018 Key words: European Union, disinformation, Russia, Stratcom Task Force, democracy ______________________________________________________________________ ABSTRACT The European Union (EU) has been specially damaged internally due to some disinformation campaigns, which have challenged its legislation and its very values. The different operations of disinformation alongside the communicative incapacity of the European Union’s institutions have generated a feeling of alarm in Brussels. Just a year before the celebration of the elections to the European Parliament, Europe has concentrated a lot of his efforts in challenge the issue of disinformation, generating new strategies, challenges, objectives and workshops such as the Stratcom Task Force or the group of experts of the European Commission. 1 DISINFORMATION WARFARES IN WORLD POLITICS: RUSSIAN CAMPAIGNS AND WESTERN COUNTERACTION 1. Introduction From the Cold War to nowadays, western countries have experienced a major challenge to its political agenda, national security and its challenges and objectives. During the last decades the actual international system has experienced how disinformation positions itself as one of the most important threats for national and international defence, security and governance. Being disinformation as a widely known and used tool at the past by major superpowers to expand its influence, the actual context where information can be gathered and shared with relatively ease has propitiated and favoured the merge of this phenomenon, that without any doubts implies a clear threat for State and non-State actors where values of democracy, rule of law and freedom prevail.
    [Show full text]
  • Coversheet for Thesis in Sussex Research Online
    A University of Sussex PhD thesis Available online via Sussex Research Online: http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/ This thesis is protected by copyright which belongs to the author. This thesis cannot be reproduced or quoted extensively from without first obtaining permission in writing from the Author The content must not be changed in any way or sold commercially in any format or medium without the formal permission of the Author When referring to this work, full bibliographic details including the author, title, awarding institution and date of the thesis must be given Please visit Sussex Research Online for more information and further details EMPIRE and EUROPE: A REASSESSMENT of BRITISH FOREIGN POLICIES 1919-1925 Christopher Thomas Crook Thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Sussex October 2017 ii I hereby declare that this thesis has not and will not be submitted in whole or in part to another University for the award of any other degree: Signature: [Christopher Thomas Crook] ORCID iD 0000-0002-8515-0491 iii Empire and Europe: A Reassessment of British Foreign Policies 1919-1925 Summary This thesis is a reassessment of British foreign policies from the Treaty of Versailles in 1919 until the Treaties of Locarno in 1925. It initially argues that much of the historiography of this period is unbalanced in its judgement of the different governments because it views them from a teleological perspective that fails to differentiate this period from the inter-war years as a whole. The problem with this approach is that the rise of Hitler and the causes of the Second World War became so dominant in such analyses that most issues within these years have only been judged within that wider context.
    [Show full text]
  • Is the Endless Iraq Conflict Finally Over?
    Is the Endless Iraq Conflict Finally Over? By Rossen Vassilev Jr. Region: Middle East & North Africa Global Research, August 04, 2019 Theme: History, Militarization and WMD, US NATO War Agenda In-depth Report: IRAQ REPORT The First Gulf War (1990-1991) How did U.S. military intervention in Iraq—the wealthiest Arab country in the 1970s—begin? The First Gulf War started in August 1990, when Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein’s army occupied neighboring Kuwait. The Iraqi dictator invaded Kuwait City after first consulting with U.S. Ambassador in Baghdad April Glaspie who assured him that Washington would stay neutral in the incipient Iraq-Kuwait conflict. Baghdad had long accused the Kuwaitis of illegally pumping and stealing crude oil from Iraq’s underground oil wells located just across their common border. Less than a year later, a large international coalition of troops, led by U.S. military forces, were dispatched by President George H.W. Bush to expel the Iraqis from occupied Kuwait. But “liberating Kuwait” was just the beginning of the U.S.-Iraqi military confrontation. Armed hostilities resumed in March 2003 after 12 years of comprehensive economic sanctions and a protracted campaign of U.S. air and missile strikes against Iraqi targets. The Second Gulf War (2003-2011) Speaking before a nonacademic audience, the late American historian Howard Zinn (a WWII bomber pilot and author of the landmark People’s History of the United States) said, “If you study history, what you learn is that wars are always accompanied by lies, wars are always accompanied by deceptions, wars are always accompanied by falsehoods like ‘We are going to war to fight for democracy, we are going to war to fight for freedom.’ Behind all the lies and deceptions that accompany all these wars was one basic motive that was behind all war—expansion, power, economics, business” (Howard Zinn: You Can’t be Neutral on a Moving Train, a First Run Features film by Deb Ellis and Denis Mueller, 2004).
    [Show full text]
  • Psyops) Publications
    Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives King's College London PSYCHOLOGICAL OPERATIONS (PSYOPS) PUBLICATIONS Box List BOX 1 Poster ‘Fit for the Army’, published by the MoD No date BOX 1 Love, Sex and War: Changing Values 1939-1945, John 1985 Costello (Pan Books) BOX 1 Memoirs of a British Agent: being an account of the 1932 author’s early life in many lands and of his official mission to Moscow in 1918, R.H. Bruce Lockhart (Putnam) BOX 1 The Zinoviev Letter, Lewis Chester, Stephen Fay and Hugo 1967 Young (Heinemann) BOX 1 VHS Führer: the life of Adolf Hitler, directed by Paul 1961 Rotha BOX 1 Doppelgangers: the truth about the bodies in the Berlin 1995 Bunker, Hugh Thomas (Quality Paperbacks Direct) BOX 1 The Man Who Never Was: The Story of Operation 1953 Mincemeat, Ewen Montagu (Evans Brothers Ltd) BOX 1 History of the Second World War: British Intelligence in 1993 the Second World War, F H Hinsley (HMSO) BOX 2 Photocopies and print-outs of articles, relating to Varied Psychological Operations, the Cold War, intelligence and propaganda, etc. BOX 3 Print-outs from websites, relating to Fascism, terrorism, Varied mercenaries, Psychological Operations and cyber-war. BOX 4 Winning Hearts and Minds: British Governments, the 1995 Media and Colonial Counter-Insurgency 1944-1960, Susan L Carruthers (Leicester University Press) BOX 4 Low Intensity Operations: Subversion, Insurgency, Peace- 1971 keeping; Frank Kitson (Faber and Faber) BOX 4 Psychological Warfare against Nazi Germany: The 1971 Sykewar Campaign, D-Day to VE-Day; Daniel Lerner (MIT Press) BOX 4 Free Agent: The Unseen War 1941-1991; Brian Crozier 1994 (HarperCollins) BOX 4 A Psychological Warfare Casebook; William E.
    [Show full text]
  • How Spies Think.Pdf
    David Omand H O W S P I E S T H I N K Ten Lessons in Intelligence Contents Introduction. Why we need these lessons in seeking independence of mind, honesty and integrity PART ONE: AN ANALYST SEES: FOUR LESSONS IN ORDERING OUR THOUGHTS Lesson 1: Situational awareness. Our knowledge of the world is always fragmentary and incomplete, and is sometimes wrong Lesson 2: Explanation. Facts need explaining Lesson 3: Estimations. Predictions need an explanatory model as well as sufficient data Lesson 4: Strategic notice. We do not have to be so surprised by surprise PART TWO: THREE LESSONS IN CHECKING OUR REASONING Lesson 5: It is our own demons that are most likely to mislead us Lesson 6: We are all susceptible to obsessive states of mind Lesson 7: Seeing is not always believing: beware manipulation, deception and faking PART THREE: THREE LESSONS IN MAKING INTELLIGENT USE OF INTELLIGENCE Lesson 8: Imagine yourself in the shoes of the person on the other side Lesson 9: Trustworthiness creates lasting partnerships Lesson 10: Subversion and sedition are now digital PART FOUR A final lesson in optimism Acknowledgements Notes and further reading Index About the Author David Omand was the first UK Security and Intelligence Coordinator, responsible to the Prime Minister for the professional health of the intelligence community, national counter-terrorism strategy and ‘homeland security’. He served for seven years on the Joint Intelligence Committee. He was Permanent Secretary of the Home Office from 1997 to 2000, and before that Director of GCHQ. For Keir, Robert, Beatrice and Ada, in the hope that you will grow up in a better world Introduction Why we need these lessons in seeking independence of mind, honesty and integrity Westminster, March 1982.
    [Show full text]
  • Issues in British and American Signals Intelligence, 1919-1932
    United States Cryptologic History Issues in British and American Signals Intelligence, 1919-1932 Special series | Volume 11 | 2015 Center for Cryptologic History This publication presents a historical perspective for informational and educational purposes, is the result of independent research, and does not necessarily reflect a position of NSA/CSS or any other U.S. government entity. This publication is distributed free by the National Security Agency. If you would like additional copies, please submit your request to: Center for Cryptologic History National Security Agency 9800 Savage Road, Suite 6886 Fort George G. Meade, MD 20755 Cover: The 1921 Washington Naval Conference Issues in British and American Signals Intelligence, 1919-1932 John Ferris SPECIAL SERIES | VOLUME 11 2016 Contents Introduction............................................................................ v Part 1: Reading the World’s Mail: British Censorship, Communications Intelligence, and Economic Warfare, 1914-1919 ............................. 1 Summary ............................................................................... 1 Background ............................................................................ 1 Economic Pressure .................................................................... 2 Blockade Evolution ................................................................... 3 Initial Attempt .................................................................... 3 Legal Basis ........................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Influence and Interference in Foreign Elections: the Evolution of Its
    Influence and Interference in Foreign Elections: The Evolution of its Practice PAUL BAINES and NIGEL JONES The use of influence or interference activities by one country to change the tide of elections in another has recently gained prominence as a result of the alleged Russian influence in the 2016 US presidential election and the 2017 French presidential election. In this article, Paul Baines and Nigel Jones chart the evolution of influence and interference in foreign elections. With the rise of its modern digital form, they consider whether it is acceptable as a norm in international relations, or a violation. The article considers how norms (and their violation) affect public trust of information, information systems and systems of government by analysing the ends, ways and means used in election interference (influence) interventions. How election influence might be countered is then considered. The article concludes by discussing whether election interference in the modern world might generate short-term gains, or whether it is likely to damage trust between states in the longer term, and therefore be harmful to both the target and the protagonist. Finally, the issue of whether election interference is an old phenomenon achieved by new ways and means or a new phenomenon achieved by old ways and means is considered. New Context, New Norms? Martha Finnemore and Kathryn Sikkink argue that norms as ‘standards of appropriate behaviour’ never emerge in a ‘normative vacuum but instead emerge in a highly contested normative space where they
    [Show full text]
  • The Political Culture of Anti-Socialism in Britain, 1900-1940
    This electronic thesis or dissertation has been downloaded from Explore Bristol Research, http://research-information.bristol.ac.uk Author: Ryan, Liam Title: The Political Culture of Anti-Socialism in Britain, 1900-1940 General rights Access to the thesis is subject to the Creative Commons Attribution - NonCommercial-No Derivatives 4.0 International Public License. A copy of this may be found at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/legalcode This license sets out your rights and the restrictions that apply to your access to the thesis so it is important you read this before proceeding. Take down policy Some pages of this thesis may have been removed for copyright restrictions prior to having it been deposited in Explore Bristol Research. However, if you have discovered material within the thesis that you consider to be unlawful e.g. breaches of copyright (either yours or that of a third party) or any other law, including but not limited to those relating to patent, trademark, confidentiality, data protection, obscenity, defamation, libel, then please contact [email protected] and include the following information in your message: •Your contact details •Bibliographic details for the item, including a URL •An outline nature of the complaint Your claim will be investigated and, where appropriate, the item in question will be removed from public view as soon as possible. The Political Culture of Anti-Socialism in Britain 1900 - 1940 Liam Ryan A dissertation submitted to the University of Bristol in accordance with the requirement the award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Faculty of Arts, School of Humani September 2018 70,740 words 1 Abstract This thesis examines the political culture of anti-socialism in Britain between 1900 and 1940.
    [Show full text]