Looking back at the Grunwick strike of 1976-78, Wayne Medford explains how ideas of solidarity and common good brought together a diverse group of people to support the rights of the striking workers, the majority of them immigrants. Forty years on and a time when intolerance is rising, the memories of Grunwick are vital
Within the broad debates about neoliberalism, neoliberal globalization and the declining power of un...
During the British miners’ strike of 1984–5 a large network of support groups was established throug...
This article introduces a special issue of Work, Employment and Society on solidarities in and throu...
The thirtieth anniversary of the 1984-5 British miners' strike has seen a number of attempts to enga...
This article explores the ways in which dominant narratives and images constructed the industrial di...
Through a focus on two examples of industrial militancy by South Asian women workers in the UK that ...
This book combines radical history, critical geography, and political theory in an innovative histor...
Alongside the 1984–5 miners' strike there developed a large and diverse support movement. Too often ...
The study examines how Aboriginal workers and workers of colour experience union solidarity and expl...
From March 1984 to March 1985, over 150,000 British coal miners walked out on strike in protest at p...
Through a focus on two examples of industrial militancy by South Asian women workers in the UK that ...
This article introduces a special issue of Work, Employment and Society on solidarities in and throu...
Without the principles of solidarity that underpin social justice, protection at work becomes just p...
This article evaluates two of the most productive recent areas of research in the historical geograp...
This book is centred on two industrial disputes, the famous Grunwick strike (1976-78) and the Gate G...
Within the broad debates about neoliberalism, neoliberal globalization and the declining power of un...
During the British miners’ strike of 1984–5 a large network of support groups was established throug...
This article introduces a special issue of Work, Employment and Society on solidarities in and throu...
The thirtieth anniversary of the 1984-5 British miners' strike has seen a number of attempts to enga...
This article explores the ways in which dominant narratives and images constructed the industrial di...
Through a focus on two examples of industrial militancy by South Asian women workers in the UK that ...
This book combines radical history, critical geography, and political theory in an innovative histor...
Alongside the 1984–5 miners' strike there developed a large and diverse support movement. Too often ...
The study examines how Aboriginal workers and workers of colour experience union solidarity and expl...
From March 1984 to March 1985, over 150,000 British coal miners walked out on strike in protest at p...
Through a focus on two examples of industrial militancy by South Asian women workers in the UK that ...
This article introduces a special issue of Work, Employment and Society on solidarities in and throu...
Without the principles of solidarity that underpin social justice, protection at work becomes just p...
This article evaluates two of the most productive recent areas of research in the historical geograp...
This book is centred on two industrial disputes, the famous Grunwick strike (1976-78) and the Gate G...
Within the broad debates about neoliberalism, neoliberal globalization and the declining power of un...
During the British miners’ strike of 1984–5 a large network of support groups was established throug...
This article introduces a special issue of Work, Employment and Society on solidarities in and throu...