This article considers the use of trade union banners as tools for mainstream education in the context of the recent reclamation, recuperation, and rearticulation of industrial heritage taking place in localities in the former Durham coalfield, north-east England. It does so by focusing on the educational work undertaken by the Follonsby Miner’s Banner Association in partnership with a local primary school. It is divided into four substantive sections. The first locates our approach theoretically, primarily in the rich pedagogical literature, while the second briefly contextualizes the Association and the school. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with teachers and activists, it offers a chronology of a project that, catalysed by the rep...
This article critically reviews the North Tyneside Community Development Project (CDP), which ran fr...
This paper presents an analysis of the significance of the Internet in rebuilding a shop stewards mo...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
This article considers the use of trade union banners as tools for mainstream education in the conte...
The history and iconography of trade union banners has been surprisingly under-explored since it was...
This article examines political change in the Durham Miners' Association (D.M.A.), one of the best-e...
The increasing display and exhibition of historic miners’ banner acts as a catalyst in creating an a...
This chapter addresses the complex interplay of disunities on three main levels; intra-organisationa...
This article presents the findings of research into the teaching of local industrial history in a so...
Of the 762 brass bands I have records of from County Durham, around 130 were colliery bands (and mor...
For the first two decades of the twentieth century, syndicalism (revolutionary trade unionism) was t...
It may seem strange to some people that I and several others travelled from England to the USA for a...
The Durham Miners’ Association (DMA) was one of the best established, wealthiest and largest trade...
Drawing inspiration from Kevin Morgan’s recent study of trade unionist A.A. Purcell, this article an...
Based upon the information recorded in the Minutes Books of the Sunderland Waifs' Rescue Agency and ...
This article critically reviews the North Tyneside Community Development Project (CDP), which ran fr...
This paper presents an analysis of the significance of the Internet in rebuilding a shop stewards mo...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
This article considers the use of trade union banners as tools for mainstream education in the conte...
The history and iconography of trade union banners has been surprisingly under-explored since it was...
This article examines political change in the Durham Miners' Association (D.M.A.), one of the best-e...
The increasing display and exhibition of historic miners’ banner acts as a catalyst in creating an a...
This chapter addresses the complex interplay of disunities on three main levels; intra-organisationa...
This article presents the findings of research into the teaching of local industrial history in a so...
Of the 762 brass bands I have records of from County Durham, around 130 were colliery bands (and mor...
For the first two decades of the twentieth century, syndicalism (revolutionary trade unionism) was t...
It may seem strange to some people that I and several others travelled from England to the USA for a...
The Durham Miners’ Association (DMA) was one of the best established, wealthiest and largest trade...
Drawing inspiration from Kevin Morgan’s recent study of trade unionist A.A. Purcell, this article an...
Based upon the information recorded in the Minutes Books of the Sunderland Waifs' Rescue Agency and ...
This article critically reviews the North Tyneside Community Development Project (CDP), which ran fr...
This paper presents an analysis of the significance of the Internet in rebuilding a shop stewards mo...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...