Georgian Liverpool’s battle for the Big Society
In the late 18th century the merchants, manufacturers and traders of Liverpool founded one of the first chambers of commerce in Britain with the aim of promoting the local economy. Bob Bennett looks at early parallels with the Coalition government’s plans for local partnerships.
This article is available to History Today online subscribers only. If you are a subscriber, please log in.
Please choose one of these options to access this article:
- Purchase a trial subscription and receive unlimited access to our archive for one week
- Purchase an online archive subscription and receive full access to all content published by History Today since 1980.
- Purchase a print and digital subscription, giving you one year's access to all our content and 12 editions of History Today magazine.
Contact our Subscriptions department on +44 (0)20 3219 7813 for more information.
If you are logged in but still cannot access the article, please contact us
- Home
- Location
- Period
- Themes
- Magazine
- Subscribe
- Archive
- eBooks
- Students
- Blog
- Contact
Related articles
This Month's Magazine
February 2012
Full contents
Buy this issue
Print subscription
Online access
Give as a gift
Newsletter
From The Current Issue
Graham E. Seel
|
David Cannadine
|
Robin Whitlock
|
From The Archive
The Falkland Islands were at the centre of dispute in 1770 – but was the conflict really over those far-away islands, or was it the political future of the French Secretary of State, Choiseul, that was at stake? |
Available To Subscribers
Follow Us
The History Today Blog
Posted 1 day 17 hours ago
|
Posted 1 day 19 hours ago
|
Posted 1 day 19 hours ago
|
On This Day In History
About 200 people died and 800 were wounded during the march led by Father George Gapon on January 22nd, 1905.