Exploring the social, cultural and political implications of deindustrialisation in 20th-century Scotland Deindustrialisation was a long-running process in Scotland, managed carefully by policy-makers in the 1960s and 1970s, and recklessly in the 1980s and 1990s. This book uses unpublished documentary sources from industrial sectors to relate Scottish Home Rule to long-running debates about economic security and working-class welfare, and examines the experiences of deindustrialisation in Scotland in terms of gender, class and community. Political and industrial changes are linked through a…mehr
Exploring the social, cultural and political implications of deindustrialisation in 20th-century Scotland Deindustrialisation was a long-running process in Scotland, managed carefully by policy-makers in the 1960s and 1970s, and recklessly in the 1980s and 1990s. This book uses unpublished documentary sources from industrial sectors to relate Scottish Home Rule to long-running debates about economic security and working-class welfare, and examines the experiences of deindustrialisation in Scotland in terms of gender, class and community. Political and industrial changes are linked through a two-part integration of themes and case studies. Part One elaborates understanding of deindustrialisation: in global terms; within the moral economy framework; and as a phased and politicised phenomenon. Part Two examines the working-class moral economy of deindustrialisation in action through case studies: shipbuilding, with Fairfields shipyard in Govan; motor manufacturing, with the Linwood car plant in Renfrewshire; and watchmaking and electronics sub-assembly, with Timex in Dundee. The book concludes its long chronological sweep with an analysis of deindustrialisation since the 1990s. Jim Phillips is Professor in Economic and Social History at the University of Glasgow. Valerie Wright is Research Associate in History at the University of Glasgow. Jim Tomlinson is Professor in Economic and Social History at the University of Glasgow.
Jim Phillips is Professor in Economic & Social History at the University of Glasgow, and author of Scottish Coal Miners in the Twentieth Century (Edinburgh University Press, 2019) and with Valerie Wright and Jim Tomlinson Deindustrialisation and the Moral Economy since 1955 (Edinburgh University Press, 2021). Valerie Wright is Research Associate in History the University of Glasgow, and co-author of High-Rise Homes, Estates and Communities in the Post-War Period (Routledge: London, 2020). Jim Tomlinson is Professor in Economic & Social History at the University of Glasgow, and author of Managing the Economy, Managing the People. Narratives of British Economic Life from Beveridge to Brexit (Oxford University Press, 2017).
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