This article investigates the personal experience of occupational disease in the industrial conurbation of Clydeside, as recounted by interviews with 31 asbestos-disease victims. We examine exposure to asbestos in the workplace and the prevailing 'machismo' work culture of the shipyards and building sites in which high levels of danger were accepted as part of the 'natural order' of things. The final section discusses the impact of occupational disease on people's lives. The oral testimony for Scotland further demonstrates the irresponsible behaviour of the industry and, importantly, the limited effectiveness of the legislation which failed to protect workers from danger prior to the 1970s. There was a wide gap between legal requirements an...
To investigate the risks of developing asbestos-related diseases, we con- ducted a historical cohor...
Asbestos was once known as the 'magic mineral' because of its ability to withstand flames. Yet since...
In order to clarify the influence of asbestos on the health of the workers engaged in works in which...
This article investigates the personal experience of occupational disease in the industrial conurbat...
This paper outlines the asbestos hazard in Scotland and draws upon a systematic oral history project...
Asbestos destroys people's lives. Asbestos-related diseases now account for some 400 deaths every ye...
This essay uses oral histories of dust disease in twentieth-century Scotland to illustrate the ways ...
This chapter discusses the oral narratives of asbestos disease victims from Clydeside
Coal mining communities are amongst the most unhealthy of all working class communities in Britain. ...
In February 1949, 5,000 or so asbestos miners downed tools and went on strike in a dispute which cen...
This article engages with two main themes recently utilised by historians of health and welfare: the...
The Asbestos Industry, being comparatively young, plays but a modest part in the Nation's activities...
Arthur McIvor and Ronald Johnston explore the experience of coal miners' lung diseases and the attem...
Occupational health history is becoming an increasingly vibrant field of study, and this thesis will...
In the period from 1945 until the mid-1970s Australia was a major consumer of asbestos products. Tod...
To investigate the risks of developing asbestos-related diseases, we con- ducted a historical cohor...
Asbestos was once known as the 'magic mineral' because of its ability to withstand flames. Yet since...
In order to clarify the influence of asbestos on the health of the workers engaged in works in which...
This article investigates the personal experience of occupational disease in the industrial conurbat...
This paper outlines the asbestos hazard in Scotland and draws upon a systematic oral history project...
Asbestos destroys people's lives. Asbestos-related diseases now account for some 400 deaths every ye...
This essay uses oral histories of dust disease in twentieth-century Scotland to illustrate the ways ...
This chapter discusses the oral narratives of asbestos disease victims from Clydeside
Coal mining communities are amongst the most unhealthy of all working class communities in Britain. ...
In February 1949, 5,000 or so asbestos miners downed tools and went on strike in a dispute which cen...
This article engages with two main themes recently utilised by historians of health and welfare: the...
The Asbestos Industry, being comparatively young, plays but a modest part in the Nation's activities...
Arthur McIvor and Ronald Johnston explore the experience of coal miners' lung diseases and the attem...
Occupational health history is becoming an increasingly vibrant field of study, and this thesis will...
In the period from 1945 until the mid-1970s Australia was a major consumer of asbestos products. Tod...
To investigate the risks of developing asbestos-related diseases, we con- ducted a historical cohor...
Asbestos was once known as the 'magic mineral' because of its ability to withstand flames. Yet since...
In order to clarify the influence of asbestos on the health of the workers engaged in works in which...