This comprehensive study examines British shipbuilding and industrial relations from 1870 to 1950, addressing economic, social and political history to provide an holistic approach to industry, trade-unionism and the early history of the Labour Party.
Examining the impact of new machinery, of independent rank-and-file movements and of craft and trade unions, The Tide of Democracy provides an authoritative account of industrial action in shipyards in the period and their effect on the birth and development of the Labour Party. This volume is clearly presented, elegantly written and suffused with a distinctly human touch which brings the technical material to life. Unique in the combined attention it gives to Scottish and English history, and drawing upon an impressive range of primary sources, this volume will be indispensable for specialist researchers, undergraduates and postgraduate students.
Mục lục
List of figures
Acknowledgments
List of abbreviations
Introduction
1. Markets and firms
2. Management and labour
3. Skills and trade unions
4. The impact of machinery: hullbuilders
5. The impact of machinery: outfitters
6. Conclusions to Part I
7. Leadership in the boilermakers’ society
8. Robert Knight and industrial democracy
9. John Hill and the the Clyde unrest
10. Conclusions to Part II
11. Liberalism and socialism
12. Robert Knight and the origins of the Labour Party
13. Socialism and liberalism
14. John Hill and an independent Labour Party
15. Conclusions to Part III
Bibliography
Index
Giới thiệu về tác giả
Alastair J. Reid is a Fellow of Girton College, Cambridge