Âé¶¹´«Ã½AV

Article

UK policy on football supporters' trusts: a 'window of opportunity' generated and exploited by the co-operative party

Details

Citation

Kippin S (2019) UK policy on football supporters' trusts: a 'window of opportunity' generated and exploited by the co-operative party. British Politics, 14 (4), pp. 408-425. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41293-018-00096-y

Abstract
The Co-operative Party is the independent sister-party of the Labour Party, with which it has had a formal relationship since 1927. Despite achieving consistently high levels of parliamentary representation for a small party, as well as its unusual ¡®sister party within the same polity¡¯ status, it has been the subject of little academic attention. This article seeks to better understand the Co-operative Party by asking what influence it had over the 1997¨C2010 Labour government¡¯s decision to create the organisation Supporters Direct, which provides advice and assistance to football supporters groups in England which aspire to establishing supporters¡¯ trusts as a means of taking a financial stake in their clubs. Utilising Kingdon¡¯s multiple streams approach to analyse the ¡®problem¡¯, ¡®policy¡¯, and ¡®politics¡¯ streams, it makes two core conclusions; (i) that policy entrepreneurs linked to the Co-operative Party were able to decisively influence the policy agenda of the Labour government and; (ii) that they did so without the involvement of Co-operative Party sponsored MPs instead influencing policy in a manner more consistent with an ¡®advocacy¡¯ think tank.

Keywords
Co-operative party; Labour party; multiple streams approach; supporters direct; New Labour; mutualism

Journal
British Politics: Volume 14, Issue 4

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2019
Publication date online29/08/2018
Date accepted by journal01/08/2018
URL
PublisherSpringer Nature
ISSN1746-918X
eISSN1746-9198

People (1)

Dr Sean Kippin

Dr Sean Kippin

Senior Lecturer, Politics