
Contents
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The capacity to compromise The capacity to compromise
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Radical and liberal opinion on local government Radical and liberal opinion on local government
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The philosophical radicals and the centralised State The philosophical radicals and the centralised State
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The conservative radicals and decentralisation The conservative radicals and decentralisation
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Local government and the Reform Act Local government and the Reform Act
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The Poor Law The Poor Law
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The 1835 Municipal Corporations Act The 1835 Municipal Corporations Act
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Notes Notes
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Cite
Abstract
The political crisis which led up to the 1832 Electoral Reform Act in Britain is seen as a near-bloodless revolution that levered the landed elites from power in favour of urban merchants and industrialists, and, in the context of local government, led to the 1834 Poor Law Reform and the 1835 Municipal Corporations Acts, which began the modernisation of the system. While the Poor Law Amendment Act is depicted as the beginning of centralisation, the Municipal Corporations Act, along with the enfranchisement after 1832 of the urban conurbations, suggested the possibility of a more decentralised patronclient system. Industrialisation was at the root of the social forces that restructured the British political system and, as part of the process, the system of local governance in the nineteenth century. This chapter discusses the impact of industrialisation on local government in Britain, radical and liberal opinion on local government, the philosophical radicals and the centralised State, the conservative radicals and decentralisation, local government and the 1832 Electoral Reform Act, the Poor Law and the 1835 Municipal Corporations Act.
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