This week’s think-tank roundup


by Liam Murray    
May 17, 2008 at 8:30 am

Welcome to this week’s think-tank roundup. Please flag anything worthy you think I might have missed out…

Left \ Liberal Think Tanks

  • At Compass Neal Lawson, in a typically robust mood, calls for a ‘New Collectivism’, a return to the basic politics of left & right and a rejection of the inherent shallowness of the New Labour project. “This capitulation to market forces had its roots in the failure of the left to renew and reinvent itself after its postwar domination of the political landscape. But in confining itself to a project that put the needs of the market before those of society, New Labour sowed the seeds of a limited and deeply frustrating life span [and the] contradictions of a largely neoliberal project performed within the body of a party of labour were always going to cause an implosion.
  • Also at Compass Gerry Hanson on the unravelling of Labour Britain - the implications of SNP control in Holyrood, the evident tensions between Gordon & Wendy and the what it all means for the union.
  • In stark contrast to the Compass view the Fabian Society carries the text of a lecture by John Denham, the only Cabinet Minister representing a southern English seat. John argues that the New Labour coalition must be rebuilt and that means connecting with voters in the South of England - where his seat is - did I mention that…?
  • Naomi Pollard at the IPPR picks up on research suggesting the great westward migration from Eastern Europe since 2004 may in fact be over and increasing numbers of migrants are now returning home.
  • CentreForum has a piece on education policy for those with learning difficulties - it suggests the debate between specialist units or mainstream integration misses the point and “parents, rather than politicians or officials, are best placed to decide where their children should go to school”
  • The European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR) carries a piece by Wolfgang Ischinger on the likely relations between Europe and the US post November’s elections. “Regardless of who wins, 2009 promises to be decisive for the transatlantic relationship. On some key issues, serious differences between US and European views remain, such as on climate change, the speed of Nato’s next enlargement steps and the strategic relationship with Russia.”
  • The Joseph Rowntree Foundation has a study on the attachment people feel to their current neighbourhood and the extent and nature of attachment in deprived areas.
  • The Kings Fund has a report on how “social and technological changes are challenging doctors and causing many to rethink their role, the way they practise and the nature of their professionalism”

Right \ Libertarian think-tanks

Elsewhere

My feedreader also has stuff from overseas think tanks (mainly US) so when worthwhile I’ll flag any interesting things there:

· About the author: Liam Murray is a regular contributor to Liberal Conspiracy. He blogs at Cassilis.
· Other posts by Liam Murray

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· Filed under: Blog , Think-tanks , Westminster

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