Ralph Miliband
Born
in Belgium
January 07, 1924
Died
May 21, 1994
Genre
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The State in Capitalist Society
14 editions
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published
1969
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Marxism and Politics
19 editions
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published
1977
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Parliamentary Socialism: A Study in the Politics of Labour
6 editions
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published
1964
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Class War Conservatism: And Other Essays
by
7 editions
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published
2015
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Socialism for a Sceptical Age
7 editions
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published
1994
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Capitalist Democracy in Britain
3 editions
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published
1982
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Kapitalist Devlet Sorunu
by
2 editions
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published
1977
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Divided Societies: Class Struggle in Contemporary Capitalism
5 editions
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published
1990
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Class power and state power
4 editions
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published
1983
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Socialist Register 1971
by
2 editions
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published
1971
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“All concepts of politics, of whatever kind, are about conflict──how to contain it, or abolish it.”
― Marxism and Politics
― Marxism and Politics
“Pious references to the Labour Party being a ‘broad church’ which has always incorporated many different strands of thought fail to take account of a crucial fact, namely that the ‘broad church’ of Labour only functioned effectively in the past because one side – the Right and Centre – determined the nature of the services that were to be held, and excluded or threatened with exclusion any clergy too deviant in its dissent.”
― Class War Conservatism: And Other Essays
― Class War Conservatism: And Other Essays
“One of the fruits of the long predominance of labourism is precisely that the party of the working class has never carried out any sustained campaign of education and propaganda on behalf of a socialist programme; and that Labour leaders have frequently turned themselves into fierce propagandists against the socialist proposals of their critics inside the Labour Party and out, and have bent their best efforts to the task of defeating all attempts to have the Labour Party adopt such proposals. Moreover, a vast array of conservative forces, of the most diverse kind, are always at hand to dissuade the working class from even thinking about the socialist ideas which evil or foolish people are forever trying to foist upon them. This simply means that a ceaseless battle for the ‘hearts and minds’ of the people is waged by the forces of conservatism, against which have only been mobilised immeasurably smaller socialist forces. A socialist party would seek to strengthen these forces and to defend socialist perspectives and a socialist programme over an extended period of time, and would accept that more than one election might have to be held before a majority of people came to support it. In any case, a socialist party would not only be concerned with office, but with the creation of the conditions under which office would be more than the management of affairs on capitalist lines.”
― Class War Conservatism: And Other Essays
― Class War Conservatism: And Other Essays
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