'This book should be read right across the trade union movement, particularly by those at the top of the organisation. It shows exactly what a trade union should do. From representing its members, to warning ministers before something goes wrong and then campaigning alongside the public when it does go wrong. The FBU took Grenfell into the labour movement and worked with the community to fight for justice. Thats what trade unionism is all about and the FBU deserves credit for placing this on record in this manner' -- Tony Kearns, Senior Deputy General Secretary of the Communication Workers Union 'It should come as no surprise that it is Paul Hampton and the FBU that have produced this monumental study. They are to be heartily commended for doing so. Culpable is a searing indictment of the death and destruction neo-liberalism has wreaked and which the FBU has long stood against' -- Gregor Gall, Visiting Professor of Industrial Relations, University of Leeds 'In this harrowing chronicle of the Grenfell fire, Hampton frames the frantic moments of heroism and exhaustion of that night within a calm, detailed account of the FBUs fire safety advocacy over the decades leading up to that tragic event. For all the FBUs clear-sighted insistence that deregulation in public services threatened public safety, Hampton shows how this advice was and has continued to be marginalised and ignored by governments and industry alike' -- Daniel Blackburn, Director of the International Centre for Trade Union Rights 'If anyone still doubts that 72 people lost their lives in the Grenfell Tower fire because successive governments deliberately took away safety measures in the name of cheapness and profit, this lucid, carefully researched, luminously written book by the Fire Brigades Unions thoroughly professional research officer Paul Hampton will put them straight' -- Francis Beckett, journalist and contemporary historian 'With compelling detail, Culpable lays the blame squarely at the door of successive government policies of deregulation of laws intended to protect lives. It clearly lays out how the interests of corporate profits were placed ahead of resident safety, ignoring numerous warnings of the dangers from the FBU, residents and many other experts' -- Tessa Wright, Professor of Employment Relations, Queen Mary University of London 'A vital contribution to the post-Grenfell debate, painstakingly researched, passionately argued, and unveiling new evidence from FBU's own archives about the astonishing number of times that politicians and senior officers in the fire service ignored FBU advice aimed at preventing a catastrophe' -- Stuart Hodkinson, lecturer in Critical Urban Geography, University of Leeds