scholarly journals Strike Action and Working-Class Politics on Clydeside 1914–1919

1990 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Foster

SUMMARYThe record of strike activity on Clydeside is used to explore the interaction between workplace organisation and political attitudes in working-class communities, focussing in particular upon the shipyard labour force in the years immediately preceding the 1919 General Strike. The findings are used to question research by Iain McLean which minimised the political significance of industrial militancy during the period of the Red Clyde and that by Alastair Reid, which argued that the main consequences of wartime industrial experience were to strengthen social democratic perspectives. It is suggested that a limited but significant radicalisation did occur and that this was related to the specific labour relations practices of employers in the west of Scotland and the structural weakness of Clydeside's economy.

1978 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 153-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas A. Hibbs

Outbursts of strike activity in many industrial societies during the late 1960s and early 1970s focused considerable attention on relations between labour, capital and the state in advanced capitalist systems and led to many inquiries into the sources of the ‘new’ labour militancy. The events of May–June 1968 in France, the ‘hot autumn’ of 1969 in Italy, and the nation-wide strikes of the coal miners in 1972 and 1974 in the United Kingdom (the first since the great General Strike of 1926) are the most dramatic examples, but sharp upturns in strike activity in Canada (1969, 1972), Finland (1971), the United States (1970) and smaller strike waves in other nations also contributed to the surge of interest in labour discontent.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 225
Author(s):  
Mohammad Rikaz Prabowo ◽  
Aman Aman

This event was based on the background of competition between political groups after the recognition of Indonesian sovereignty on December 27, 1949, namely the pro-integration groups into the Republik of Indonesia through the West Kalimantan National Committee (KNKB), with those who wanted to maintain the status of the Special Region of West Kalimantan (DIKB) within the framework of a systemized Federal RIS. This competition resulted in a political crisis that affected the entire province. The republicans in the KNKB demanden the DIKB Government that West Kalimantan be part of the Republic of Indonesia. This desire was responded coldly, even though the DIKB figures rejected the entry of the TNI. This sparked demonstration that led to the arrest of republicans and a general strike which resulted in a political crisis. The political crisis subsided after the arrival of the RIS and DPR-RIS Commissioners. The arrest of Sultan Hamid II on April 5 1950 paralyzed DIKB and accelerated joining the Republic of Indonesia.


Author(s):  
Geoffrey Evans ◽  
Peter Egge Langsæther

Since the early days of the study of political behavior, class politics has been a key component. Initially researchers focused on simple manual versus nonmanual occupations and left versus right parties, and found consistent evidence of a strong effect of class on support for left-wing parties. This finding was assumed to be simply a matter of the redistributive preferences of the poor, an expression of the “democratic class struggle.” However, as the world became more complex, many established democracies developed more nuanced class structures and multidimensional party systems. How has this affected class politics? From the simple, but not deterministic pattern of left-voting workers, the early 21st century witnessed substantial realignment processes. Many remain faithful to social democratic (and to a lesser extent radical left) parties, but plenty of workers support radical right parties or have left the electoral arena entirely. To account for these changes, political scientists and sociologists have identified two mechanisms through which class voting occurs. The most frequently studied mechanism behind class voting is that classes have different attitudes, values, and ideologies, and political parties supply policies that appeal to different classes’ preferences. These ideologies are related not only to redistribution but also to newer issues such as immigration, which appear to some degree to have replaced competition over class-related inequality and the redistribution of wealth as the primary axis of class politics. A secondary mechanism is that members of different classes hold different social identities, and parties can connect to these identities by making symbolic class appeals or by descriptively representing a class. It follows that class realignment can occur either because the classes have changed their ideologies or identities, because the parties have changed their policies, class appeals, or personnel, or both. Early explanations focused on the classes themselves, arguing that they had become more similar in terms of living conditions, ideologies, and identities. However, later longitudinal studies failed to find such convergences taking place. The workers still have poorer, more uncertain, and shorter lives than their middle-class counterparts, identify more with the working class, and are more in favor of redistribution and opposed to immigration. While the classes are still distinctive, it seems that the parties have changed. Several social democratic parties have become less representative of working-class voters in terms of policies, rhetorical appeals, or the changing social composition of their activists and leaders. This representational defection is a response to the declining size of the working class, but not to the changing character or extent of class divisions in preferences. It is also connected to the exogeneous rise of new issues, on which these parties tend not to align with working-class preferences. By failing to represent the preferences or identities of many of their former core supporters, social democratic parties have initiated a supply-side driven process of realignment. This has primarily taken two forms; class–party realignments on both left and right and growing class inequalities in participation and representation.


1960 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 424-455 ◽  
Author(s):  
Royden Harrison

The history of working-class politics in Britain during the last hundred years might be written in terms of changing attitudes towards Liberalism; a Liberalism which was continuously redefining itself as its social composition altered and political circumstances changed. Successive generations of working-class leaders attempted both to identify themselves with Liberalism and to disengage themselves from it. Those who saw the political future of labour in terms of full incorporation within the Liberal party were never left unchallenged; those who believed in political independence rarely thought of that independence as involving a complete break with Liberal values. From the eighteen-sixties onwards the conflict between the desire to be assimilated and the urge to independence was continuously present within individuals as well as within movements.


1979 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 269-293 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gøsta Esping-Andersen

There has developed an abundant literature on the social and political determinants of social policies, but few have addressed the question of how state policies, once implemented, affect the system of stratification in civil society. This article examines the political consequences of social policy in Denmark and Sweden, countries in which a social democratic labor movement has predominated for decades. Superficially, these two highly developed welfare states appear very similar. Yet, the political and social contexts in which their social policies have evolved differ substantially. I shall demonstrate the argument that the traditional welfare state approach may be conducive to a new and powerful political conflict, which directly questions the legitimacy of the welfare state itself, unless government is successful in subordinating private capitalist growth to effective public regulation. In Denmark, where social democratic governments have failed to match welfare state growth with more control of private capital, social policy has tended to undermine the political unity of the working class. Consequently, the Social Democratic Party has been weakened. Social welfare programs, in effect, have helped create new forms of stratification within the working class. In Sweden, social democratic governments have been quite successful in shifting a decisive degree of power over the private market to the state. This has helped avert a crisis of the welfare state, and has also been an important condition for continued social democratic hegemony and working-class unity. I conclude that social reform politics tend to be problematic from the point of view of the future power of social democratic movements.


2006 ◽  
Vol 49 (1) ◽  
pp. 217-246 ◽  
Author(s):  
MATTHEW ROBERTS

This article is a contribution to the continuing debate on the character and electoral fortunes of the Conservative party in late Victorian England. Using the West Riding borough of Leeds as a case study, this article focuses on suburban Conservatism (villa toryism) and situates it within the broader context of urban Conservatism in and beyond Leeds. It explores the nature of Conservative electoral dominance in the period after the Third Reform Act. In doing so, it further challenges conventional interpretations about the rise of class-based politics. As the example of Leeds demonstrates, villa toryism was not the political expression of a socially homogeneous, innately conservative suburban middle class. The intense electoral competition that ensued challenges assumptions about suburbia being politically quiescent and dull. Popular Conservatism, it is argued, was a protean and socially heterogeneous political culture, of which villa toryism was one distinctive strand. Villa toryism was the suburban incarnation of respectable, self-reliant, hierarchical, and domesticated popular Conservatism. This villa toryism was distinct from, but related to, the working-class Conservatism of the older industrial districts of urban England.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Γεωργία Μπακάλη

The present PhD thesis, based on new archival documents and sources, attemptsa new approach to the tobacco workers issue (kapnergatiko zitima) and the social strugglesof the tobacco workers (kapnergates) of Eastern Macedonia, Greece, during 1919-1936. The research focuses on this particular region, where the finest varieties of orientaltobacco were produced and processed in the tobacco firms (kapnomagaza), according tothe thorough classic commercial processing. The thesis focuses on the local experience aswell as the similarities and differences between the local experience and the experience ofthe tobacco workers of other tobacco towns (kapnoupoleis) of the country. It is supportedthat the tobacco workers movement was an expression of political protest originatingfrom the changes in the processing method. This protest is attributed to a combinationof factors, such as the political formation of the working class, the particular ideologicaland political orientation of the tobacco workers’ leadership, the state’s political discourseand its politics regarding the working class. The factors contributing to the developmentof class consciousness among the workers during the period from the Liberals’ (Fileleftheroi)rise to power (1910-1920) to the founding of the General Confederation ofGreek Workers (Geniki Synomospondia Ergaton tis Ellados) and the Socialist WorkersParty of Greece (Sosialistiko Ergatiko Komma Ellados) (1918) are studied, along withtheir contribution to the development of the labour movement and the tobacco workersmovement. The trade union and professional structure of the tobacco workers, especiallythe role of the skilled labour (denkçi) in the production process, as well as the socialistorientation of the heads of the unions who worked in the tobacco processing centers ofEastern Macedonia are discussed and stressed as the determining elements of the outburstof the workers’ struggles. The different phases of the tobacco workers issue are analyzed,regarding their demand to stop the exportation of unprocessed tobacco. The issue wasaddressed immediately after World War I by the workers who went on general strike in1919. Although it was centered around the fine tobaccos of Eastern Macedonia, it soonbecame an issue that affected all tobacco workers of Greece, thus turning into a class issue.During 1924-1925, there were protests and other forms of violent struggle, led by theCommunist Party of Greece (Kommounistiko Komma Ellados), including the obstructionof unprocessed tobacco exportation, the destruction of tobacco bales and violent clasheswith the authorities. This was a struggle against capital and a defence against the attacks of the bourgeois state. The large-scale strikes of 1927 and 1928 occurred in a time ofrivalry between the two tobacco trade unions, the communist and the conservative one,and had largely political motives. The underlying cause was the communists’ reactionagainst the state’s attempt to divide and manipulate trade unions, which were up to thencontrolled by the communists. These attempts caused disorder within the trade unions aswell as violations of political and trade union freedoms. The struggles for the prohibitionof unprocessed tobacco exportation contributed to the radicalization of the tobacco workers,who were continuously defending their political and trade union freedoms, whichwere violated by the various governments, culminating in the establishment of the Idionymonlaw in 1929. The exports of the renowned fine tobaccos of Eastern Macedoniastarted to decline during the 1930s due to the international financial crisis. At the sametime, the simplest commercial processing (tonga) was gradually imposed resulting in thedecline in the tobacco workers’ financial status. The impoverished workers were urged tospontaneous uprisings without the political and ideological leadership of the CommunistParty. The mobilizations called for “Food. Employment” and also caused the uprising ofagriculturalists and urban professionals who were disappointed by the bourgeois parties,thus embracing the entire people. The participation in the large-scale general strike inMay 1936 and the massive protests against the government’s actions to find a solution tothe problem indicated that social and political awareness were substantially increased.


2018 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 599-615 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris Smith ◽  
Ngai Pun

In refuting Guy Standing’s precariat as a class, we highlight that employment situation, worker identity and legal rights are mistakenly taken as theoretical components of class formation. Returning to theories of class we use Dahrendorf’s reading of Marx where three components of classes, the objective, the subjective and political struggle, are used to define the current formation of the working class in China. Class is not defined by status, identity or legal rights, but location in the sphere of production embedded within conflictual capital–labour relations. By engaging with the heated debates on the rise of a new working class in China, we argue that the blending of employment situation and rights in the West with the idea of precarity of migrant workers in China is misleading. Deconstructing the relationship between class and precarity, what we see as an unhappy coupling, is central to the article.


Author(s):  
Malcolm Petrie

Concentrating upon the years between the 1924 and 1929 general elections, which separated the first and second minority Labour governments, this chapter traces the rise of a modernised, national vision of Labour politics in Scotland. It considers first the reworking of understandings of sovereignty within the Labour movement, as the autonomy enjoyed by provincial trades councils was circumscribed, and notions of Labour as a confederation of working-class bodies, which could in places include the Communist Party, were replaced by a more hierarchical, national model. The electoral consequences of this shift are then considered, as greater central control was exercised over the selection of parliamentary candidates and the conduct of election campaigns. This chapter presents a study of the changing horizons of the political left in inter-war Scotland, analysing the declining importance of locality in the construction of radical political identities.


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