Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

Facing Up to Thatcherism: The History of NALGO 1979-93 [Kietas viršelis]

(Professor of Industrial Relations, Keele University), (Lecturer in Industrial Relations, Keele University)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 468 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 243x162x30 mm, weight: 843 g, 3 black and white plate sections, 28 tables
  • Išleidimo metai: 04-Jan-2001
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0199240752
  • ISBN-13: 9780199240753
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 468 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 243x162x30 mm, weight: 843 g, 3 black and white plate sections, 28 tables
  • Išleidimo metai: 04-Jan-2001
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0199240752
  • ISBN-13: 9780199240753
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Throughout the 1980s Mrs Thatcher dominated political life in the UK and Thatcherism became the shorthand for a series of political initiatives all over the world. Most accounts of these years have concentrated on the economics of free markets and privatization. This book takes a different stance through a detailed analysis of the responses of NALGO (The National and Local Government Officers Association) members, activists, leaders, and officials to the government's public sector reform and restructuring programme.

Employees in health, local government, and education faced cuts in funding, compulsory competitive tendering, internal markets, and new management practices associated with HRM and TQM. Others in the gas, water, electricity, and transport industries faced wholesale privatization.

This unique account of the period written from the evidence and perspective of those involved will be an important source for researchers, teachers, and practitioners in politics, industrial relations, public administration, and management concerned with the events and lessons of the 1980s.

Recenzijos

deserves to be widely read. It is a work of academic distinction and is informed by an understanding attitude to trade unionism set out in its opening chapter ... provides a radical commentary on the theory of industrial relations and throws new light on the damaging consequences of Thatcher's period of office. * Jim Mortimer, Socialist Campaign Group News, 10, July 2001 * This book deals very well with the issues which led to the merger of NALGO, NUPE and COHSE - three proud, strong and independent trade unions ... This is not the usual stodge of political anecdote, but a fascinating insight into an important part of our recent industrial struggle. * Ivan Beavis, Morning Star, 9 May 2001 * If you think this is just another self-congratulatory trade union history, wherein aged ex-activists celebrate their trade union careers, you are mistaken. This is a bit of a cracker ... This book is an appropriate testament to the roles played by oustanding trade unionists * Ivan Beavis, Morning Star, 9 May 2001 *

List of Plates
xvi
List of Figures
xvii
List of Tables
xviii
Abbreviations xx
NALGO---What Kind of Trade Union?
1(34)
The Context---Global Neo-Liberalism
6(3)
The Management of Labour: Markets, Processes, and Ideologies
9(5)
Trade Unionism: Methods, Structures, and Organization
14(13)
NALGO is a Trade Union and All NALGO Members are Trade Unionists
27(8)
NALGO: 1905--1978
35(43)
Sixty Years of Development, 1905-1965
36(7)
National Collective Bargaining and Industrial Action, 1965-1978
43(5)
NALGO's World c.1978
48(7)
What NALGO did Next
55(8)
Appendix
63(15)
The Advent of Thatcherism
78(39)
The Fall of the Labour Government and the Winter of Discontent
79(6)
NALGO and the Social Workers' Strike of 1978-9
82(3)
The Conservatives are Coming
85(3)
The Monetarists Bare their Teeth
88(4)
Pay Bargaining---Business as Usual
92(10)
NALGO and the Local-Government Comparability Dispute, 1980
98(4)
Fight the Cuts! Defend the Union!
102(4)
NALGO Gets Political
106(3)
Building Unity and Common Cause
109(4)
Concluding Remarks
113(2)
Appendix
115(2)
The Squeeze Tightens
117(46)
The Political Economy of Thatcherism---Defiance and Despair
118(4)
Attacks on Local Government
122(7)
NALGO and the Penwith Strike---the Dismissal of Alec Maund
127(2)
Privatization and Efficiency: The Terrible Twins
129(7)
NALGO Policy and Practice
136(13)
The NALGO Steward System
145(4)
Collective Bargaining and Local Disputes
149(8)
Concluding Remarks
157(3)
Appendix
160(3)
Thatcherites versus the Trade-Union Movement
163(41)
The Politics of Defeat
164(11)
NALGO and the Anti-Union Laws
165(6)
NALGO and the 1984-5 Miners' Strike
171(4)
The Right, the Wrong, and the Left in NALGO
175(7)
NALGO's Defence of Muhammad Idrish
180(2)
Collective Bargaining---the Beat Goes On
182(8)
Facing up to the Conservative Counter-Revolution
190(8)
Concluding Remarks
198(2)
Appendix
200(4)
Privatization and the Retreat from National Bargaining
204(38)
The March of the Marketeers
205(3)
Pragmatism in the Face of the Enemy
208(10)
NALGO and the Fight for Equal Rights
210(5)
NALGO and the Politics of Campaigns---Getting the Union Message Across
215(3)
Against Deregulation and Privatization, for Making People Matter
218(6)
Settling for the Going Rate Nationally, Fighting Back Locally
224(12)
NALGO and Violence at Work---a Health and Safety Issue
233(3)
Concluding Remarks
236(2)
Appendix
238(4)
Storms---Financial, Climatic, and Industrial
242(48)
Still Losing Ground
243(5)
Solidarity: The Friends Within
248(8)
NALGO in the TUC
251(5)
Deregulation and Management Reforms
256(13)
The Last Throw of the National Pay Bargaining Dice?
269(13)
NALGO and the Local Government Strike 1989
279(3)
Concluding Remarks
282(2)
Appendix
284(6)
Markets, Managers, and the Merger
290(57)
A New Prime Minister, the Same Old Song
291(4)
Movements---for Merger, Mandela, and Equality; against Poll Tax and Anti-Union Laws
295(18)
NALGO and Opposition to the Poll Tax
297(4)
NALGO and the Anti-Apartheid Movement
301(12)
Labour Management and the Markets
313(9)
Reports of the Death of Collective Bargaining---Greatly Exaggerated
322(19)
NALGO and the Regrading Claims of Medical Secretaries
334(7)
Concluding Remarks
341(2)
Appendix
343(4)
NALGO'S Last Year
347(36)
The Tories---Five More Years!
347(3)
Campaigning, Merging, and Holding the Line
350(9)
Recession, Redundancies, and Falling Relative Pay
359(20)
Concluding Remarks
379(2)
Appendix
381(2)
In Unison
383(10)
The Cold Logic for Merger
383(5)
The Dialectics of Exploitation---Losing Control and Controlling Loss
388(4)
Conclusion
392(1)
Bibliography 393(18)
Index 411


Roger Seifert read Philosophy, Politics, and Economics at Oxford University before taking an M.Sc. in Economics and later a Ph.D. in Industrial Relations at the London School of Economics. He worked for Incomes Data Service before joining Keele University where he is now Professor of Industrial Relations.

Mike Ironside read Mechanical Engineering at Aston University and then became a local government officer and a trade union activist. He took an MA in Industrial Relations and worked as a research officer for a trade union before joining Keele University as a lecturer in 1990.