Introduction: The Paradox of Power.
1. Looking After Number One at Number Ten.
2. Glendower in A Shrinking World.
3. What Makes Downing Street Change?.
4. Becoming and Remaining Party Leader.
5. From Private to Public Government.
6. Winning Elections.
7. Managing Parliament and Party.
8. Managing Colleagues and Bastards.
9. Running - and Running After- The Economy.
10. Managing Decline in a Shrinking World.
11. Tony Blair: A Populist Prime Minister.
12. What Comes After Blair?.
Appendix A: Prime Ministers Since 1945.
Appendix B: A Guide to Further Reading.
Richard Rose is Director of the Centre for the Study of Public Policy and Sixth Century Chair in Politics at the University of Aberdeen. He is a Fellow of the British Academy.
'The best-informed analysis of the pressures on and limits of the
Prime Minister in the new century.' Dennis Kavanagh, University of
Liverpool
'Richard Rose has an unusual ability to look at familiar questions
about power - and its exercise in Downing Street - from a fresh,
and invariably provocative, perspective. In The Prime Minister in a
Shrinking World he highlights the global constraints on even a
Prime Minister who dominates Whitehall and Westminster.' Peter
Riddell, The Times
'Richard Rose is a veteran author of political textbooks, which are
still on university reading lists many years after publication.
This one will undoubtedly join them.' Iain Dale, Bookseller Buyers
Guide
'The field of political studies is now so thoroughly tilled that it
is quite a challenge to come up with any new perspective. The first
thing to be said about Richard Rose's investigation into the
contemporary nature of prime ministerial power is that he
successfully contrives to overcome that hurdle ... If the Prime
Minister seriously wants to banish that haunting image of him -
initially dreamt up by his friend and mentor, Roy Jenkins - of a
young man nervously carrying a precious vase across a long,
slippery marble floor, then he could do worse than to read (and
learn from) this far from reassuring book.' Anthony Howard, The
Sunday Times
'Entertaining.' The Economist
'This book by Richard Rose is possibly the best observation of the
Prime Minister in relation to the position of Britain in the modern
world that I have ever read. Rose draws upon his many years of
rubbing shoulders with politicians and PMs from Clement Atlee to
Tony Blair in order to bring this very in-depth look at the
prestigious occupier of Number Ten throughout the ages ... A very
good read.' M2 Communications
'The great strength of this book is that Rose draws upon four
decades of following and analysing British politics to produce a
book that is full of insight and marvellous anecodotes ... it is a
good read.' British Politics Group Newsletter
'This book provides a sound warning of the perils a Prime Minister
faces vis-a-vis his colleagues, his MPs, civil servants, the media
and the public at large ... The book abounds in delightful quotes
and the author's own bon mots.' Frontline
'This is a book for the student and the general reader - a
refreshing example of political science with its hair down ... The
book is both informative and a pleasure to read.' Times Literary
Supplement
'This book by Richard Rose is possibly the best observation of the
Prime Minister in relation to the position of Britain in the modern
world that I have ever read.' M2 Best Books
'The nature of the constraints facing British Prime Ministers, and
their implications for the contemporary premiership, are explored
by Richard Rose with great clarity and enthusiasm. As such, The
Prime Minister in a Shrinking World thoroughly deserves to become a
classic text on the British premiership, and one that will remain
highly relevant for very many years to come' Talking Politics
"Rose admirably demonstrates how prime-ministerial power has
increased at Westminster while diminishing internationally."
Parliamentary Affairs
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