Difference between revisions of "Nexus"

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In 1998 at the direction of the Government, an 'on-line think tank' called [[Nexus]] initiated (within 'on-side' academic circles) a series of debates on the Third Way, involving [[Anthony Giddens]]; [[David Marquand]], [[Julian Le Grand]], Professor of Social Policy at the LSE; and the Directors of the [[Institute for Public Policy Research]] and the [[Fabian Society]]. The founder of the network was [[Neal Lawson]] of the lobbying firm [[LLM Communications]].  It also had a journals associated with it, titled [[Renewal]]
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In 1998 at the direction of the Government, an 'on-line think tank' called [[Nexus]] initiated (within 'on-side' academic circles) a series of debates on the Third Way, involving [[Anthony Giddens]]; [[David Marquand]], [[Julian Le Grand]], Professor of Social Policy at the LSE; and the Directors of the [[Institute for Public Policy Research]] and the [[Fabian Society]]. The founder of the network was [[Neal Lawson]] of the lobbying firm [[LLM Communications]].  It also had a journal associated with it, titled [[Renewal]]
  
 
The whole sad little gang: but no academic backing was given to the practical meaning or legitimacy of the Third Way. [[Nexus]] was held up as providing a 'tested model of how intellectuals, academics, social entrepreneurs and policy experts would assist the development of the public policy of centre-left governments.' It soon deteriorated to extinction. One more confirmation of the vacuum in Third Way thinking, and the inability of its proponents to apply its ideas to concrete social realities.{{ref|Andrews}}  
 
The whole sad little gang: but no academic backing was given to the practical meaning or legitimacy of the Third Way. [[Nexus]] was held up as providing a 'tested model of how intellectuals, academics, social entrepreneurs and policy experts would assist the development of the public policy of centre-left governments.' It soon deteriorated to extinction. One more confirmation of the vacuum in Third Way thinking, and the inability of its proponents to apply its ideas to concrete social realities.{{ref|Andrews}}  

Revision as of 08:16, 20 June 2006

In 1998 at the direction of the Government, an 'on-line think tank' called Nexus initiated (within 'on-side' academic circles) a series of debates on the Third Way, involving Anthony Giddens; David Marquand, Julian Le Grand, Professor of Social Policy at the LSE; and the Directors of the Institute for Public Policy Research and the Fabian Society. The founder of the network was Neal Lawson of the lobbying firm LLM Communications. It also had a journal associated with it, titled Renewal

The whole sad little gang: but no academic backing was given to the practical meaning or legitimacy of the Third Way. Nexus was held up as providing a 'tested model of how intellectuals, academics, social entrepreneurs and policy experts would assist the development of the public policy of centre-left governments.' It soon deteriorated to extinction. One more confirmation of the vacuum in Third Way thinking, and the inability of its proponents to apply its ideas to concrete social realities.[1]

For more details see William Clark The Tainted Word Variant, No. 13

  1. ^ Geoff Andrews Technocrats or Intellectuals?; Third Way Debate Summary can be found here. Their own figures say that it got 140 postings by 45 people.