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Mapping the State: Part I: Envisioning England’s reformed electoral map
Mapping the State
Part I: Envisioning England’s reformed electoral map
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table of contents
Cover
Series
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
List of illustrations
Acknowledgements
List of abbreviations
Introduction
Part I: Envisioning England’s reformed electoral map
1. A balancing Act? Interests and parliamentary reform, 1780–1832
2. ‘The most unpopular part of the bill throughout the country’: Reintegrating boundaries into the story of reform
3. Towards a science of government: The ‘spirit of inquiry’ and the establishment of the 1831–2 boundary commission
4. Whipped by the beadles? Data-gathering for the boundary commission
Part II: Redrawing England’s electoral map
Chronology and voting data
5. ‘The work we are engaged in is intended to last for a century’: Redrawing England’s ancient electoral map
6. The Droitwich dilemma: Interests, grouping and the multiple parish borough
7. ‘All the kindred interests of the town and neighbourhood’: New borough limits
8. Under the knife: Reconstructing the county map
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
About This Text
Part I
ENVISIONING ENGLAND’S REFORMED ELECTORAL MAP
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