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THINKING ALLOWED
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Thinking Allowed
Wednesday 16:00-16:30
Laurie Taylor discusses the latest social science research.
17 October 2007
repeat 21 October
Listen to this programme in full
GENDER VOTING
Rosie Campbell, Lecturer in Research Methods at Birkbeck College, University of London, discusses her research into masculine and feminine perspectives on politics, and the different ways in which men and women evaluate the policies put forward by the political parties.

REVOLUTION
George Bernard Shaw said that “revolutions have never lightened the burden of tyranny: they have only shifted it to another shoulder” and the French Revolution with its guillotines, The Terror and finally Napoleon would seem to give the argument strength – as would Stalin in Russian. But are we doing revolution a disservice? Is it outsiders and counter-revolutionaries that cause all the problems?

Laurie Taylor talks to Mike Haynes, the author of a new study which claims that revolutions are a useful and inevitable engine of social progress and to David Wootton, Professor of History at the University of York. The English Revolution brought parliamentary sovereignty and the French revolution lead – eventually – to the abolition of slavery. Are revolutions violent and abhorrent or glorious and misunderstood?
This week’s guests:

Rosie Campbell
Lecturer in Research Methods at Birkbeck College, University of London

The myth of the homogeneous voter: Masculine and feminine perspectives on politics
Rosie Campbell and Kristi Winters
Paper presented at the 2007 Political Studies Association Conference in Bath (not yet published)

Gender and Voting Behaviour in Britain
An ESRC-funded research project conducted by Dr Rosie Campbell 

Dr Mike Haynes
Historian at the University of Wolverhampton

History and Revolution, Refuting Revisionism
by Mike Haynes and Jim Wolfreys
Publisher: Verso
ISBN-10: 1844671518
ISBN-13: 978-1844671519 

Professor David Wootton
Anniversary Professor of History, the centre for Renaissance and Early Modern Studies at University of York
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