If you were forwarded this by a colleague please click here to subscribe | Ten must-read blogs The left struggled to understand Margaret Thatcher. When it finally did, the result was New Labour The New Statesman was at the forefront of anti-Thatcher campaigning. But in common with much of the left, it never properly understood the forces she unleashed. By Jason Cowley Announcing the New Statesman Centenary Issue We celebrate 100 years with the largest single issue of the magazine in its history. By New Statesman Margaret Thatcher: feminist icon? "I hate feminism. It is poison," she reportedly told her adviser Paul Johnson. By Helen Lewis Miliband's lost welfare intervention Everyone waited for the Labour leader to say something on welfare. He did but (for obvious reasons) no one noticed. By Rafael Behr Cameron's embrace of Thatcher's mantle has been a disaster for the Tories In opposition, Cameron recognised the profound limits of Thatcher's approach. But in office he has retreated into dogmatism. By George Eaton "Troubled families tsar" admits there aren't 120,000 troubled families Families in trouble are not the same as families causing trouble. By Alex Hern How the pundits are becoming more influential than the politicians As Owen Jones and Evan Harris show, you can make more headway pushing your agenda from the TV studios in Millbank than the green benches over the road. By Richard Morris Don't use Mick Philpott's case as a stick to bash polyamory I'm in a relationship with three men and it's nothing like the controlling, coercive hold that Mick Philpott had over his wife and mistress. By Charlie Hallam Are attacks on goths, heavy metal fans and other "subcultures" hate crimes? A legal and bureaucratic scheme that privileges some types of hate crime as special while ignoring others is dangerous in itself. By By Nelson Jones Mao's last dancer A muscle-bulging, tendon-stretching leap across the borders. By James Rose The issue is on sale now, or you can subscribe through the website. Special Offer Get 12 Issues for just £12, plus A free copy of A History of Capitalism According to the Jubilee Line by John O'Farrell Subscribe today for the following benefits: - Save £125 on the annual cover price!
- Never miss an issue
- The magazine will be delivered to your door each week - sent by first class mail or airmail
- Free access to the PDF edition (worth £50 a year)
- Money back guarantee - we will send you a full refund on the unexpired part of your subscription should you decide you don't want to receive any more issues
- Free access to the New Statesman archive
- Subscription continues for £14.99 at quarterly intervals, unless cancelled, for one year. Then £9.99 a month thereafter.
 | | Now recruiting New Statesman Jobs is the job site for intelligent and forward thinking job seekers. Click below to search jobs from our featured employers. Operations Co-ordinator - Runcorn
- £12000 - £14000 per annum + free car parking
We are currently recruiting for an experienced Operations Co-ordinator for a growing Travel Company based in the North West. Education: Law Degree or 1st degree followed by Masters MSc/LLM in a legal related discipline. You will be polite, professional and courteous and be able assist with answering Groups Travel telephone line. Hours will be on a shift basis between 9am-9:30pm with ad hoc weekends as and when required. Recruiter: AA Appointments Group | | | |
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home