Volume 39, Issue 2 p. 237-252

State Power and Ideology in Britain: Mrs Thatcher's Privatization Programme

Joel Wolfe,

University of Cincinnati

An earlier version of this paper was presented at the 1989 American Political Science Association annual meeting. In making revisions, I have benefited from the helpful comments and criticisms of Gerard Braunthal, Richard E. Foglesong, Jack Hayward, Desmond S. King and two anonymous reviewers.

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Abstract

State-centred theory, a leading exemplar of the new institutionalism, assumes the separation of state from society and objectivity from subjectivity. This epistemological stance supports a structural analysis which holds that the state is an actor in its own right, that the state has distinctive interests, and that state capacity depends on strong institutions and weak societal opposition. Yet the case of the Thatcher governments’ideologically motivated privatization programme challenges the statists’hypotheses and epistemology. Rather, the making of British privatization policy supports the view that the way political actors form and use ideas is important in explaining state power and in defending the liberal democratic vision of mankind as the maker of history.

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