In the new issue of Renewal, Jonathan Webb argues housing reforms need to be considered in the context of how our housing market operates, the profit-seeking behaviour that underpins it and the power relations that are baked into it journals.lwbooks.co.uk/renewal/vol-... (£)
The Labour Party have placed huge emphasis on planning reforms to fix England�s broken housing market. However, these reforms ne
In the new issue of Renewal, James Plunkett argues a new ‘how’ of governing is taking shape. It combines missions, relational practices, and internet-era methods to create a new type of state. The online version is free to read: renewal.org.uk/a-new-how-wh...
From the polycrisis to the pace of technological change, our old ways of governing are struggling. But a new ‘how’ is taking shape, argues James Plunkett. It combines missions, relational practices, a...
In the new issue of Renewal, Patrick Diamond, Jack Shaw and Andy Westwood argue Labour must articulate a consistent rationale for further English devolution. journals.lwbooks.co.uk/renewal/vol-... (£)
The future success�of a�Labour Government is likely to hinge on how far people and communities that perceive themselves to have
In the new issue of Renewal, Jane Gingrich argues that Labour’s industrial policy requires a deep understanding of the causes of low productivity and high inequality in the UK. Free to read: journals.lwbooks.co.uk/renewal/vol-...
In the new issue of Renewal, Christine Berry argues that Labour should embrace a radical pragmatism in its environmental policies and overall programme. Free to read: journals.lwbooks.co.uk/renewal/vol-...
In the new issue of Renewal, Dan Chandler makes the case for a more ambitious agenda on labour rights and economic democracy. Free to read: journals.lwbooks.co.uk/renewal/vol-...
In the new issue of Renewal, Fran Boait & Danisha Kazi of Positive Money argue that Labour’s approach to the City of London goes hand in hand with upholding whiteness. journals.lwbooks.co.uk/renewal/vol-... (£)
If a Labour government pursues a deregulatory financial agenda to stimulate growth this would only serve to uphold a deeply flaw
In the new issue of Renewal, Kate Alexander-Shaw argues that while Labour have now set out their diagnosis, as long as economic policy is driven primarily by their fiscal rules, the link from diagnosis to policy prescriptions will be broken. Free to read: journals.lwbooks.co.uk/renewal/vol-...
In the new issue of Renewal, Nick O'Donovan discusses Labour's fiscal and economic strategies, arguing that the new government needs to break out of its own political constraints. The online version is free to read: renewal.org.uk/breaking-out/
The UK has spent the last fifteen years locked in a low-investment, low-growth holding pattern of its own making. Since the 2019 election, changes in the national and global economic environment have ...
In the new issue of Renewal, Phoenix Andrews wonders whether Starmer will be a one term wonder. In the desperate bid to win the support of socially conservative ‘hero voters’, Labour has failed to offer principled and bold alternatives to the Conservatives journals.lwbooks.co.uk/renewal/vol-... (£)
A Starmer government will likely struggle to maintain popularity in office. In the desperate bid to win the support of socially