Dr Colm Murphy, BA (Cambridge), MPhil (Cambridge), PhD (QMUL)

Senior Lecturer in British Politics
Email: colm.murphy@qmul.ac.ukRoom Number: ArtsOne 2.05
Profile
Teaching
- POL108 – Background to British Politics
- POL3001 – Boom and Bust: The Politics of the British Economy
Research
Research Interests:
Publications
Books
Futures of Socialism: “Modernisation”, the Labour Party, and the British Left, 1973-1997 (Cambridge University Press, 2023).
Articles
'The Political Crisis of British Keynesianism', Past & Present (early access).
'"Towards a modern democracy?" The constitutional politics of the 1990s British left', Contemporary British History 38:4 (2024), 565-589.
‘Introduction: The Future of Political History’, The Political Quarterly 94:2 (2023), 201-207.
‘The forgotten rival of Marxism Today: the British Labour Party’s New Socialist and the Business of political culture in the late twentieth century’, The English Historical Review 138:593 (2023), 871-897.
‘The “rainbow alliance” or the focus group? Sexuality and race in the Labour Party’s electoral strategy, 1985-7’, Twentieth Century British History 31:3 (2020), 291-315.
‘Rival Imagined Communities in the Dublin Lockout of 1913’, History Workshop Journal 86 (2018), 184-204.
Co-authored articles
Colm Murphy and Patrick Diamond, 'Prudence from the Left: Economic restraint and UK social democracy since 1945', The British Journal of Politics and International Relations 27:4 (2025), 1430-1453.
Nigel Kettley and Colm Murphy, ‘Augmenting excellence, promoting diversity? Preliminary design of a foundation year for the University of Cambridge’, British Journal of the Sociology of Education 42:3 (2021), 419-434.
Edited collections
Lyndsey Jenkins, Colm Murphy and Robert Saunders (eds), ‘The Future of Political History’, The Political Quarterly 94:2 (2023), 201-320.
Book chapters
‘What did the 1983 manifesto ever do for us?’, in Nathan Yeowell (ed.), Rethinking Labour’s Past (I.B. Tauris, 2022), 215-231.
Forthcoming
‘The Pitfalls and Promise of Contemporary Labour History’, in Sarah Kenny and Sarah Crook (eds), The Routledge Handbook of Contemporary British History (forthcoming).
Selected Reviews
The Neoliberal Age? Britain since the 1970s, edited by Aled Davies, Ben Jackson and Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite (Twentieth Century British History, 2023).
The modernisation of the Labour Party, 1979-97 by Christopher Massey (Party Politics, 2022).
Michael Young, Social Science & the British Left, 1945-1970, by Lise Butler (Reviews in History, 2021).
Selected reports, articles and blogs
‘The “polycrisis” and social democracy’, Renewal blog (2024).
(with Patrick Diamond), ‘Why Labour must adopt radical new tax policies - including on wealth and capital’, Observer (2024).
‘Keir Starmer: three warnings from history for Labour’s seventh British prime minister’, The Conversation (2024).
‘Britain’s energy transition in the shadow of the 1970s’, Engelsberg Ideas (2024).
(with Alfie Steer), ‘Convert, Cooperative, or Condemn: What Could the Labour Left Do Now?’, Political Insight (2023).
‘Back to the Future?’, Fabian Review (2023).
(edited with Farah Hussain), Governing in Hard Times: Urgent Questions for the British Centre-Left (2023).
‘Keir Starmer and the Philosopher’s Stone’, Renewal 30:3 (2022).
‘Kinship to Daggers Drawn: Tony Blair and Gordon Brown’, Institut Montaigne (2022).
‘Who can Stop the War? The British Left, NATO, and Russia’, UK in a Changing Europe (2022).
‘Are the 1930s the true historical parallel for Labour today?’, Prospect (2020).
‘Editorial: The unspoken dilemmas of Corbynomics’, Renewal 27:3 (2019).
Supervision
PhD students
Robin Campbell (with Patrick Diamond)
Prospective PhD candidates
I am interested in supervising PhD projects on British and Irish domestic politics in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, including parties, elections, institutions, and political thought. I am especially interested in topics relating to: a) the history of British social democracy and/or socialism; b) nationalism(s), the Union, and the implications of European integration for domestic politics; and c) the history of economic policymaking.
Public Engagement
Co-convenor, ‘Britain at Home and Abroad since 1800’, Institute of Historical Research Seminar
Contributing Editor, Renewal: A Journal of Social Democracy.
Special Sections Editor, The Political Quarterly
Colm’s work has been published, cited or mentioned in outlets like the Observer/Guardian, City AM, the Irish Examiner, History Today, Prospect, LabourList, Times Radio, Fabian Review, RTVE, The Sunday National, Institut Montaigne and The Conversation. He has appeared on France 24, BFMTV and Deutsche Welle’s ‘Inside Europe’.