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  1. 28 de out. de 2016 · Beatrice and Sidney Webb were the primary authors of the political economy of Fabian socialism. Their work together spanning half a century left an indelible mark on the evolution of opinion and legislation on trade unionism, local government, the relief of poverty, and theories of the transition to socialism. This chapter was originally ...

  2. Martha Beatrice Webb (o.s. Potter; 22. tammikuuta 1858 Gloucester – 30. huhtikuuta 1943 Liphook, Hampshire) oli brittiläinen itseoppinut sosiologi, sosiaalihistorioitsija ja sosialistinen ajattelija. Yhdessä aviomiehensä Sidney Webbin kanssa hän vaikutti vasemmistolaisen seuran Fabian Societyn piirissä. [1]

  3. Sidney and Beatrice Webb formed one of the most remarkable married partnerships in British history; they deeply influenced the social thought and the social institutions of their country. They were born in very different social environments. Beatrice, the older, was born in January 1858 at Standish House near Gloucester, the eighth daughter of ...

  4. Beatrice and Sidney Webb working together in 1895 In H. G. Wells ' The New Machiavelli (1911), the Webbs, as "the Baileys", are mercilessly lampooned as short-sighted, bourgeois manipulators. The Fabian Society, of which Wells was briefly a member (1903–1908), fares no better in his estimation.

  5. Sidney James Webb, 1st Baron Passfield (July 13, 1859 – October 13, 1947) and Martha Beatrice Potter Webb (January 22, 1858 - April 30, 1943) were British socialists, economists, and reformers, the early members of the Fabian Society.

  6. Margaret I. Cole. Sidney and Beatrice Webb - Labour Party, Social Reformers, Fabian Society: When the Webbs, in late 1914, became members of the Labour Party, they rapidly rose high in its counsels. (Their leadership in the Fabian Society had been shaken by the opposition, first of H.G. Wells and later of the Guild Socialists, who advocated ...

  7. Sidney was a civil service clerk when George Bernard Shaw induced him to join the Fabian Society in 1885. He wrote the first Fabian tract, Facts for Socialists (1887), and took to lecturing on socialism. In 1891 he met Beatrice, author of The Cooperative Movement in Great Britain (1891), and they were married in 1892.