Stephen Baxter; Kelly Robson; Paul Macauley; Hannu Rajaniemi; Seanan Mcguire; Reynolds; Lavie Tidhar; Peter Watts; Nagata Solaris (2018) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
This book is an important study of the growth of the New Right in New Zealand in the years 1984 to 1999. Its value arises from the way it focuses on the global context of the economic and moral programmes for change in the 1980s and 1990s, aiming to provide a more accurate picture than that given either by those who see the reforms as part of the play of global capitalism or by those who see them in terms of local personalities and agendas. The book also pays attention to the moral aspects of the New Right programmes, showing how NZ differed in this respect from countries like the US, UK and Australia. This in turn leads to the third original feature of the book, its analysis of the New Right in terms of its advocacy of political and civil rights over economic and cultural rights. This book will be of interest to scholars, has textbook potential and will also appeal to general educated readers at a time when thoughtful and informed comment on issues of national identity and public policy is desperately needed.