This is an integrated range of studies focusing on Wales by a long-established and internationally-recognised academic authority and member of the House of Lords on the advance of democracy and the evolving idea of national identity in modern Britain. It casts back to the impact of change in Europe and the wider world from the 1789 Revolution in France onwards, covering key personalities such as Lloyd George and the impact of the First World War in Wales, and relates to contemporary debates on Scottish independence and the connections with Europe to open up wider issues of open government, foreign policy, the rule of law and cultural diversity.
Tabla de materias
Foreword
1. Consensus and Conflict in Modern Welsh History
2. Democracy in Wales, Chartism to Devolution
3. Kentucky’s ‘Cottage-bred Man’: Abraham Lincoln and Welsh Democracy
4. The Relevance of Henry Richard
5. Lloyd George as a Parliamentarian
6. Flintshire’s Liberal Loyalist: the Political Achievement of Sir Herbert Lewis
7. Wales and the First World War
8. Alfred Zimmern’s Brave New World: Liberalism and the League in 1919 and After
9. England, Wales, Britain and the Audit of War
10. Power and Glory: Labour in War and Reconstruction 1939 – 1951
11. Welsh Devolution: the past and the future
12. Wales and Europe: From Revolutionary Convention to Welsh Assembly, 1789 – 2014
Postscript: A Tale of Two Unions