<i>[T]he collection provides valuable insights into the use of rhetorical devices and how ''real life'' examples are distorted and disguised to provide evidence of ''what works''. At the time of writing, the Big Society seems to have disappeared from government's central platform, but if the debate is rekindled in the future or elsewhere in the world, then I strongly recommend the book as a source of criticism and counter-evidence.'</i><br /> --Alison Gilchrist, <i>Community Development Journal</i><p><i>'[T]his book offers an absorbing, scholarly and highly readable critique of ''Big Society'' and is to be recommended to students, academics and readers who want to learn more about current British social policy.'</i><br /> --Catherine Forde, <i>Voluntas</i></p><p><i>'This text is a worthwhile contribution to a burgeoning field we may wish to call ''Big Society studies''. The breadth of the discussion, not only regarding the topics covered but in encompassing both sociological and social policy perspectives, makes this text relevant to a variety of readers. The editors have delivered contributions with historical and contemporary claims, as well as providing space for critical writers seeing the Big Society as neoliberal rhetoric alongside those engaged in more detailed perspective on the government's policy agenda.'</i><br /> --Matt Dawson, <i>Journal of Social Policy</i></p>