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Pubs for the people

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A fascinating trip into the world of the English pub, tracing its past and exploring how it represents the hope of a more connected and compassionate future.
  • 20 October 2026
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A heartfelt case for why the English pub still matters and how we can save it.

In Pubs for the people, Amit Singh and Sivamohan Valluvan offer a daring defence of the humble public house, waging battle against those who see the pub only as a poignant symbol of a bygone England.

Making a journey into the nation’s living room, they blend tales of Singh’s father – the founder of London’s first ‘Desi pub’ – with a lively travelogue that carries them from a hipster nightmare in Shoreditch to an izakaya-inspired Eccles pub run by migrants from Hong Kong. Along the way, they take on private equity, yuppie gentrifiers and culture-war blowhards who use the pub as a prop for their rage-baiting patriotism.

Life today can seem lonelier, angrier and poorer than it did before. But as Singh and Valluvan show, the pub offers the inviting prospect of a more equal, sociable and comfortably multiracial England.

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Price: $27.95
Pages: 272
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 20 October 2026
ISBN: 9781526194541
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Popular Culture, Popular culture, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, HISTORY / Social History, Food and drink service industries, Sociology: sport and leisure, Social and cultural history
REVIEWS Icon

‘A book that could not be more timely. This is a politically sharp and sardonically funny history of a precious institution too often reduced to stereotype and nostalgia. It is also a generous tribute to convivial culture and a manifesto on behalf of the local in both senses, for a place that should be always the same and always different.’
Owen Hatherley, author of The Alienation Effect

‘Raising a glass from Dar es Salaam to the desi pubs of Dudley Road, this book offers an up-to-date examination and possible path forward for the Great British pub and its loyal patrons.’
John Warland, Founder of Liquid History Tours

‘Taking us for a pint in a variety of establishments, from Wetherspoons to Black Country desi pubs, this book nudges our understanding of the English pub away from today's right-wing hallucination and back towards something more accurate and nuanced. In doing so, it reveals the pub's capacity for ordinary, everyday togetherness. A clever, charming and powerfully convivial book.’
Emma Warren, author of Up the Youth Club: A Love Letter

Pubs for the people is an enjoyable counterpoint to declinist narratives about the health of the pub, and also the country itself. It eschews nostalgia for what pubs used to be and instead celebrates them as a resilient and fluid format that has adapted to the needs of people today.’
Jonathan Nunn, writer and co-editor of Vittles

‘With Pubs for the people, Amit and Vallu have really captured the spirit of the British pub and offered a crucial perspective on the importance of its continued existence. So often this great cultural institution is taken for granted, but here it is captured with deep respect, an incredible level of research and some wonderful writing.’
Matthew Curtis, editor, Pellicle Magazine

‘At a time when everything is pushing us all to be as isolated, alienated and automated as possible, Pubs for the people reminds us of the importance of protecting the Great British pub as a space where communities can share in kinship and merriment. Written to be read with one hand, while you hold a fresh pint with the other.’
Kojo Koram, author of Uncommon Wealth: Britain and the Aftermath of Empire

‘Amit and Vallu's sociological eye has brought a genuinely fresh perspective to the analysis of the British pub, past, present and future. But it is their personal experiences and family stories that make the book truly credible. This frank discussion of both the rough and the smooth of the pub experience offers something that will fascinate the general reader and resonate deeply with the regular pub goer.’
Laura Hadland, drinks writer and CAMRA Campaigner of the Year 2024

‘A vital book about the difference between the pub being typically English versus exclusively English. A bold reimagining of the pub as part of the solution, not the problem, to the radicalism and racial tension currently gripping Britain.’
Pete Brown, author of Clubland: How the Working Men’s Club Shaped Britain

Sivamohan Valluvan is a sociologist at the University of Warwick. He is the author of The Clamour of Nationalism: Race and Nation in Twenty-First-Century Britain (2019). His writing has appeared in the Guardian, Renewal, Salvage, Red Pepper and Progressive Review.

Amit Singh is a sociologist at University College London. He is the author of Cancelled Futures: Class, Race, and Place in Post-Industrial Britain (2026). He would, in another life, have been a fourth-generation publican.

Introduction: pubs for the people?
1 The rise and fall of the pub
2 Racism, rupees and the ‘world famous’ Glassy Junction
3 The Wetherspoons takeover
4 Hipster pubs, gastropubs and somewhere in between
5 Death of the rural pub?
6 Pubs for other Englands: mixed grills in the Midlands
Conclusion: salvaging the good life?
Index