an extremely valuable addition to the academic literature, opening the door to further avenues for discussion which would provide important practical lessons for politicians and parties, not just academics.
Jennifer Lees-Marshment, University of Auckland, New Zealand, Party Politics
This is an erudite and highly enjoyable book, which, like Bale's previous work in the field, sets a new standard against which other scholars of Conservative politics will be judged.
Richard Hayton, Leeds University, Political Studies Review
The book is meticulously researched, clearly structured and underpinned by an explicit methodology that is sound. It contains a rich and nuanced narrative of Conservative Party change ... Bale's book is a superb piece of scholarship that is destined to become a key reference on the Tories. It deserves to be so.
Jim Buller, Global Discourse Journal
... the book contains an impressive amount of research and analysis that scholars interested in post-war British politics and political parties will find indispensable.
Ryan Shaffer, The Jounral of the Historical Association
Bale has written yet another seminal book on the contemporary Conservative Party. Meticulously researched, cogently argued and lucidly written, this is deservedly destined to be absolutely essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the internal dynamics of Britains oldest and most (electorally) successful political party
Peter Dorey, Cardiff University, West European Politics
The Conservatives since 1945 is a rich, historical analysis which seeks to address pressing questions relevant to all parties today ... The book thus constitutes an extremely valuable addition to the academic literature, opening the door to further avenues for discussion which would provide important practical lessons for politicians and parties, not just academics.
Jennifer Lees-Marshment, Party Politics
Bale operates in the terrain between history and politics, testing models drawn from political science against thickly descriptive historical examples. This refreshingly interdisciplinary approach has established him as one of the leading scholars of modern Conservatism, whose work can be read with profit by general readers and scholars from both disciplines.
Robert Saunders, Renewal
A book of the highest quality ... significantly different from the existing books on twentieth or post-war Conservative history ... Academics will find the book has considerable academic depth through its engagement with a diverse range of sources and approaches. However, the general reader who is interested in politics and parties, can engage with the analysis as it is jargon free. [The book] seeks to interest the reader by communicating in an accessible way. This is to be commended and many political scientists could learn from Bale and abandon their convoluted methodologies and tortuous prose that serve to alienate rather than educate. Above all else, this is a book that will be of tremendous value to students of the Conservative Party and British political history generally for many decades.
Dr Timothy Heppell, London School of Economics and Political Science
The Conservatives since 1945, examines the motors of change within the party at every level from the high politics of leadership and factional dominance to the minutiae of party organisation ... The book is rich in surprises.
Colin Kidd, The London Review of Books
The British Conservative party is one of the most successful political parties in the world. This detailed monograph provides an illuminating analysis of its drivers of change during the period 1945-1997 ... The author makes extensive use of primary archival sources as well as synthesising secondary material. The analysis is rigorous: most points are made with supporting evidence from a multiplicity of sources.
Democratization24/07/13
[The Conservatives Since 1945] crosses disciplinary boundaries - testing the findings of political science against rigorous historical investigation remarkably comprehensive and persuasive [Bale] has the unusual gift of presenting a forensic analysis in compelling prose.
Mark Garnett, Times Higher Education
Bale is covering ground that is well-trodden, but even here he combines useful syntheses of existing analyses with new archival research, and careful judgements on a wide range of historiographical questions, which will make the book highly valuable for both reference and teaching.
Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite, English Historical Review
Bale does not propose a unifying model for party change; on the contrary, his account is consciously eclectic and multicausal. In this respect, it offers a valuable debunking of the extravagant claims made in more schematic studies
Robert Saunders, Renewal