Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Ralph Miliband (born Adolphe Miliband; 7 January 1924 – 21 May 1994) was a Polish - British Marxist sociologist. Miliband was born in Brussels, Belgium to working class Polish Jewish immigrants. He was a Polish citizen from 1924-1948. He was a British citizen from 1948 until his death.

  2. Jul 10, 2010 · Ibid., 16-17 September 1973. This is a reference to an article in Rouge, by J.P. Beauvais, who gives an eye-witness account of one such army raid, on 4 August 1973, in which one man was killed and several were wounded in the course of what amounted to an attack by parachute troops on a textile plant. 32.

  3. Jul 14, 2010 · For an earlier discussion of these and related issues, see R. Miliband, Marxism and Politics (1977), Ch.VI, Reform and Revolution. 3. The 1984 Socialist Register was wholly devoted to The Uses of Anti-Communism and discusses many facets of the issue. Ralph Miliband/Marcel Liebman: Beyond Social Democracy (1985)

  4. Prior to Ralph Miliband’s The State in Capitalist Society, the instrumen-talist theory of the state had been most prominently, if cryptically, articulated by Paul Sweezy (1942, p. 243), who asserts that the state is ‘an instrument in the hands of the ruling class for enforcing and guar-anteeing the stability of the class structure itself’.

  5. He recently sold his memoirs to the Sunday Mirror for £120,000, joined Clydesdale Bank for £5,000 a year as non-executive director, and in November the British Airways Board for £10,000 a year. In December he was nominated president of the National Bible Society of Scotland’ (The Guardian, 27 January 1983).

  6. The Sickness of Labourism. “It is a very difficult country to move, Mr. Hynband, a very difficult country indeed, and one in which there is more disappointment to be looked for than success.”. Disraeli, 1881. the last General Election has had at least one beneficial result: it has shocked many more people into a recognition of the fact that ...

  7. We shall examine one such debate in Political sociology between Nicolas Poulantzas, Ralph Miliband and Ernesto Laclau which became a key reference point in discussions on the state during the 1970s and 1980s and was also taken up in many other contexts. Theorising state and politics in Marxism.