POL3001 Boom
and Bust: The Politics of the British Economy
Credits: 15
Semester: 1
Assessment: Item
1: 30% Oral Presentation Item 2: 70% Exam
Module
Convenor: Dr Colm Murphy and Dr Karl Pike
This module
introduces students to different ways of understanding ‘the economy’: how it does and does not work for people.
Through learning theories and concepts in political economy, students will
broaden their understanding of economic inequality, what makes ‘the economy’,
how politicians perceive ‘economic constraints’, and different visions of a
‘good’ society. Students will study postwar Britain, from an expanded welfare
state to ‘neoliberalism’ and privatisation; from so-called ‘postwar consensus’
policies to the global financial crisis and austerity; and from the fallout of
Brexit to the legacy of fossil fuel dependence. This module will be of
particular interest to students who studied British Politics (POL243),
Modernity (POl247) or Comparative Politics (POL284).
This module is running for the first time in 2024/25