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  1. Edward R. Pease. This is a list of Fabian Tracts of The Fabian Society published up to the end of 1915. It is extracted from Edward R. Pease 's history of the society published in 1916. Pease was a founding member of the society. A great number of additional tracts and other series of Fabian books have since been published.

  2. Mabel Atkinson (1876–1958) was a Northumberland-born feminist, socialist, humanist, and influential member of the Fabian Society. First joining in 1897, from 1906, she was part of its local government group, and in 1908 was a founding member of the Women’s Group. Atkinson served on the Fabian executive for a decade, from 1909 to 1919.

  3. Fabians ‘always believed themselves to be rather above other socialists’, more worldly-wise and with a deeper political insight. Pease made a similar point when he considered that ‘we regarded membership as something of a privilege’, which made the Society appear middle-class and elitist.9 Secondly, Fabians adhered to

  4. The League of Nations (1919) Outside Britain, the Fabian Society's ultimate goal has been the establishment of a Socialist World Government. The Society's concern with international organisation was articulated early on in Fabian documents like "International Government" (L.S. Woolf, 1916) which formed the basis for the creation, three years later (at the end of World War I), of the League of ...

  5. The Fabian Society is an independent left-leaning think tank and a democratic membership society with over 7,000 members. We influence political and public thinking and provide a space for broad and open-minded debate. We publish insight, analysis and opinion; conduct research and undertake major policy inquiries; convene conferences, speaker ...

  6. Social Networks. The main body through which the Fabian Society operated in the beginning was the Liberal Party, this being the centre-left party at the time. However, the Fabians' involvement with Liberal politics also linked them with liberal capitalist interests, regular contact with whom was nurtured through various Fabian creations such as the Coefficients Dining Club (Quigley, pp. 137-8 ...

  7. fact that the Fabians and other Socialist groups have been attacked by the Marxist-Leninists, is offered as sufficiently convincing evidence that so far from “moderate” Socialists assisting the Communist advance, they are in fact the only real barrier to Communism. But as one of the famous architects of the British Welfare State,