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Harold Wilson by Ben Pimlott
Harold Wilson by Ben Pimlott












Harold Wilson by Ben Pimlott Harold Wilson by Ben Pimlott

"He wrote about big people in a big way," the political historian David Butler said last night. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.Born a few days before Clement Attlee's landslide victory in the 1945 election which led the way to the modern welfare state, he devoted much of his career to assessing the Attlee government's legacy.

Harold Wilson by Ben Pimlott

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. On Tuesday, December 7th, 2010 at 2:25 pm by Daniel Weinbren and is filed under People. On 7th December, the Daily Mirror, in a report suggesting that The Open University will face £84m worth of funding cuts, called Wilson the creator of the OU. 70 Ben Pimlott, Harold Wilson, HarperCollins, London, 1992 p. The Open University became his pet scheme…’ (Denis Lawton, Education and Labour Party ideologies 1900-2001 and beyond, RoutledgeFalmer, Abingdon,2005, p. Ben Pimlott said of the OU that ‘it was Wilson who made the running. Denis Lawton, called the OU ‘a very rare example of socialist ideas of equality and community being applied to the elitist world of higher educaiton Wilson has not always been given sufficient credit for this initiative’. There were not many founders of the OU, but even selecting just from within the ranks of the Labour Party the names of Jennie Lee and Harold Wilson should be mentioned. While a recognition of Young’s enthusiasm to broaden educational opportunities is welcome, there may be some who will take issue with Paul Richards proposal that The Open University is one of a number of institutions which ‘owe everything to Young’s vision’. He launched ships he didn’t captain them. By empowering individuals through new forms of organization, he hoped to build new forms of egalitarian community… Young’s ideas were often the spark, but his gift was to be able to cut loose his creations as fast as possible, and allow new people to take over. Young, he suggestsĪdded to the sum of civil society by launching new entrants to it. On his blog Labour Party activist Paul Richards argues that modern Britain has been shaped by the movements and institutions that Michael Young (1915-2002) inspired.














Harold Wilson by Ben Pimlott