1
Economy: 1944 Employment White Paper [MT’s annotated copy]. http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/110368
2
Roderick Floud and Paul Johnson, editor. The Cambridge economic history of modern Britain: Vol. 3. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2004.
3
Roderick Floud and Paul Johnson, editor. The Cambridge economic history of modern Britain: Vol. 3. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2004.
4
Jim Tomlinson. Re-inventing the ‘moral economy’ in post-war Britain. Historical Research 2011;84:356–73. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2281.2010.00544.x
5
Jim Tomlinson. A ‘Failed Experiment’? Public Ownership and the Narratives of Post-War Britain. Labour History Review 2008;73:228–43. doi:10.1179/174581808X324289
6
Fraser WH, MyiLibrary. A history of British trade unionism 1700-1998. Basingstoke: : Macmillan 1999. http://lib.myilibrary.com/browse/open.asp?id=24813&entityid=https://idp.gla.ac.uk/shibboleth
7
Wrigley C. A history of British industrial relations, 1939-1979: industrial relations in a declining economy. Cheltenham: : Edward Elgar 1996.
8
NARRATING CRISIS: THE DISCURSIVE CONSTRUCTION OF THE ‘WINTER OF DISCONTENT’ on JSTOR. http://ezproxy.lib.gla.ac.uk/login?url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/42855681
9
Taylor R. The trade union question in British politics: government and unions since 1945. Oxford: : Blackwell 1993.
10
Ackers P. Game Changer: Hugh Clegg’s Role in Drafting the 1968 Donovan Report and Redefining the British Industrial Relations Policy-Problem. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2014;:63–88. doi:10.3828/hsir.2014.35.3
11
Fox A. Managerial Ideology and Labour Relations. British Journal of Industrial Relations 1966;4:366–78.http://ezproxy.lib.gla.ac.uk/login?url=http://search.ebscohost/login.aspx?direct=true&db=buh&AN=5402040&site=ehost-live
12
Phillips J. Industrial Relations, Historical Contingencies and Political Economy: Britain in the 1960s and 1970s. Labour History Review 2007;72:215–33. doi:10.1179/174581607X264801
13
Smith P. Order in British Industrial Relations: From Donovan to Neoliberalism. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2011;:115–54. doi:10.3828/hsir.2011.31-32.6
14
Dorey P. The Stepping Stones Programme: The Conservative Party’s Struggle to Develop a Trade-Union Policy, 1975-79. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2014;:89–116. doi:10.3828/hsir.2014.35.4
15
Economy: "Stepping Stones” Report (final text) | Margaret Thatcher Foundation. http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/111771
16
University of Keele. Historical studies in industrial relations. 1996.
17
Taylor R. The trade union question in British politics: government and unions since 1945. Oxford: : Blackwell 1993.
18
Jackson B, Saunders R. Making Thatcher’s Britain ̀. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2012. http://ezproxy.lib.gla.ac.uk/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511998164
19
Fraser WH, MyiLibrary. A history of British trade unionism 1700-1998. Basingstoke: : Macmillan 1999. http://lib.myilibrary.com/browse/open.asp?id=24813&entityid=https://idp.gla.ac.uk/shibboleth
20
McKibbin R, Oxford University Press. Classes and cultures: England, 1918-1951. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 1998. http://ezproxy.lib.gla.ac.uk/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198206729.001.0001
21
Phillips J. Class and Industrial Relations in Britain: The ‘Long’ Mid-century and the Case of Port Transport, c. 1920-70. Twentieth Century British History 2005;16:52–73. doi:10.1093/tcbh/hwi009
22
Rollings N. Cracks in the Post-War Keynesian Settlement? The Role of Organised Business in Britain in the Rise of Neoliberalism Before Margaret Thatcher. Twentieth Century British History 2013;24:637–59. doi:10.1093/tcbh/hwt005
23
Taylor R. The trade union question in British politics: government and unions since 1945. Oxford: : Blackwell 1993.
24
Morelli C, Tomlinson J. Women and Work after the Second World War: A Case Study of the Jute Industry, Circa 1945-1954. Twentieth Century British History 2007;19:61–82. doi:10.1093/tcbh/hwm033
25
Dawson ST. Busy and Bored: The Politics of Work and Leisure for Women Workers in Second World War British Government Hostels. Twentieth Century British History 2010;21:29–49. doi:10.1093/tcbh/hwp055
26
Rose SO. Women’s Rights, Women’s Obligations: Contradictions of Citizenship in World War II Britain. European Review of History: Revue europeenne d’histoire 2000;7:277–89. doi:10.1080/713666747
27
Wilson DS. Postgraduate Essay Prize Winner for 2005 * A New Look at the Affluent Worker: The Good Working Mother in Post-War Britain. Twentieth Century British History 2006;17:206–29. doi:10.1093/tcbh/hwl008
28
University of Keele. Historical studies in industrial relations. 1996.
29
Jaffe J. The Ambiguities of Compulsory Arbitration and the Wartime Experience of Order 1305. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2003;:1–25. doi:10.3828/hsir.2003.15.1
30
Tomlinson J. Re-inventing the ‘moral economy’ in post-war Britain. Historical Research 2011;84:356–73. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2281.2010.00544.x
31
Gildart K. Coal Strikes on the Home Front: Miners’ Militancy and Socialist Politics in the Second World War. Twentieth Century British History 2009;20:121–51. doi:10.1093/tcbh/hwn043
32
McIlroy J, Campbell A. Beyond Betteshanger: Order 1305 in the Scottish Coalfields during the Second World War, Part 1: Politics, Prosecutions and Protest. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2003;:27–72. doi:10.3828/hsir.2003.15.2
33
McIlroy J, Campbell A. Beyond Betteshanger: Order 1305 in the Scottish Coalfields during the Second World War, Part 2: The Cardowan Story. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2003;:39–80. doi:10.3828/hsir.2003.16.2
34
PHILLIPS J. The Postwar Political Consensus and Industrial Unrest in the Docks, 1945–55. Twentieth Century British History 1995;6:302–19. doi:10.1093/tcbh/6.3.302
35
Tyndall A. Patriotism and Principles: Order 1305 and the Betteshanger Strike of 1942. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2001;:109–30. doi:10.3828/hsir.2001.12.4
36
Dash J, Tower Hamlets (England). Good morning, brothers! London: : Directorate of Education and Community Services 1995.
37
Hill S. The dockers: class and tradition in London. London: : Heinemann 1976.
38
Fred Lindop. Unofficial Militancy in the Royal Group of Docks 1945-67. Oral History 1983;11:21–33.http://ezproxy.lib.gla.ac.uk/login?url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/40178765
39
Phillips J. ‘A Karachi stowage’: dockers and the sea in twentieth-century Britain. History in Focus 2005;9.http://www.history.ac.uk/ihr/Focus/Sea/articles/phillips.html
40
Phillips J. Class and Industrial Relations in Britain: The ‘Long’ Mid-century and the Case of Port Transport, c. 1920-70. Twentieth Century British History 2005;16:52–73. doi:10.1093/tcbh/hwi009
41
Davis CJ. Waterfront revolts: New York and London dockworkers, 1946-61. Urbana, Ill: : University of Illinois Press 2003.
42
Phillips J. The great alliance: economic recovery and the problems of power, 1945-1951. London: : Pluto Press 1996.
43
University of Liverpool. The dock worker: an analysis of conditions of employment in the port of Manchester. Liverpool: : University Press of Liverpool 1954.
44
Weiler P. British Labour and the cold war. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1988.
45
Levinson M. The box: how the shipping container made the world smaller and the world economy bigger. Princeton: : Princeton University Press 2006.
46
University of Keele. Historical studies in industrial relations. 1996.
47
Wrigley C. A history of British industrial relations, 1939-1979: industrial relations in a declining economy. Cheltenham: : Edward Elgar 1996.
48
Wilson DF. Dockers: the impact of industrial change. London: : Fontana 1972.
49
Phillips GA, Whiteside N. Casual labour: the unemployment question in the port transport industry, 1880-1970. Oxford: : Clarendon Press 1985.
50
Phillips J. Industrial Relations, Historical Contingencies and Political Economy: Britain in the 1960s and 1970s. Labour History Review 2007;72:215–33. doi:10.1179/174581607X264801
51
Turnbull P. Dock strikes and the demise of the dockers’ ‘occupational culture’. The Sociological Review 2008;40:294–318. doi:10.1111/j.1467-954X.1992.tb00890.x
52
Turnbull P, Wass V. The Greatest Game no more - Redundant Dockers and the Demise of `Dock Work’. Work, Employment & Society 1994;8:487–506. doi:10.1177/095001709484001
53
Goldthorpe JH. The affluent worker: industrial attitudes and behaviour. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1968.
54
Wilson DS. Postgraduate Essay Prize Winner for 2005 * A New Look at the Affluent Worker: The Good Working Mother in Post-War Britain. Twentieth Century British History 2006;17:206–29. doi:10.1093/tcbh/hwl008
55
Savage M. Working-Class Identities in the 1960s: Revisiting the Affluent Worker Study. Sociology 2005;39:929–46. doi:10.1177/0038038505058373
56
Wrigley C. A history of British industrial relations, 1939-1979: industrial relations in a declining economy. Cheltenham: : Edward Elgar 1996.
57
Marsden D. The car industry: labour relations and industrial adjustment. London: : Tavistock 1985.
58
Phillips J. The industrial politics of devolution: Scotland in the 1960s and 1970s. Manchester: : Manchester University Press 2008.
59
Charlesworth A. An atlas of industrial protest in Britain, 1750-1990. Basingstoke: : Macmillan 1996.
60
Young S, Hood N. Chrysler UK: a corporation in transition. New York: : Praeger 1977.
61
Beynon H. Working for Ford. 2nd ed. Harmondsworth: : Penguin 1984.
62
Cavendish R. Women on the line. London: : Routledge & Kegan Paul 1982.
63
Ackroyd S. The Oxford handbook of work and organization. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2006. http://ezproxy.lib.gla.ac.uk/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199299249.001.0001
64
Gilmour A. The Trouble with Linwood: Compliance and Coercion in the Car Plant, 1963–1981. Journal of Scottish Historical Studies 2007;27:75–93. doi:10.3366/jshs.2007.27.1.75
65
Macdonald CL. The shopfloor experience of regional policy: work and industrial relations at the Bathgate motor plant, c.1961-1986. 2013. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/4638/
66
University of Keele. Historical studies in industrial relations. 1996.
67
Wrigley C. A history of British industrial relations, 1939-1979: industrial relations in a declining economy. Cheltenham: : Edward Elgar 1996.
68
Murden J. Demands for Fair Wages and Pay Parity in the British Motor Industry in the 1960s and 1970s. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2005;:1–27. doi:10.3828/hsir.2005.20.1
69
McIlroy J. ‘Every factory our fortress’: Communist Party Workplace Branches in a Time of Militancy, 1956-79, Part 2: Testimonies and Judgements. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2001;:57–107. doi:10.3828/hsir.2001.12.3
70
Fryer P. Staying power: the history of black people in Britain. [New ed.]. London: : Pluto Press 2010.
71
Goodyer I. Rock against racism: Multiculturalism and political mobilization, 1976–81. Immigrants & Minorities 2003;22:44–62. doi:10.1080/02619288.2003.9975053
72
Mason D. Race and ethnicity in modern Britain. 2nd ed. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2000.
73
Carnevali F, Strange J-M. Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. 2nd ed. Harlow: : Pearson Longman 2007.
74
Lunn K. Race and labour in twentieth-century Britain. London: : Frank Cass 1985.
75
Freeman GP. Immigrant labor and racial conflict in industrial societies: the French and British experience, 1945-1975. Princeton: : Princeton University Press 1979.
76
Knowles C, Ebooks Corporation Limited. Race, discourse, and labourism. London: : Routledge 1992. http://www.GLA.eblib.com/EBLWeb/patron/?target=patron&extendedid=E_532564_0
77
Lindop F. Racism and the working class: strikes in support of Enoch Powell in 1968. Labour History Review 2001;66:79–100.http://ezproxy.lib.gla.ac.uk/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=buh&AN=6380416&site=ehost-live
78
Campbell A, Fishman N, McIlroy J. British trade unions and industrial politics. Aldershot: : Ashgate 1999.
79
Dromey J, Taylor G. Grunwick: the workers’ story. London: : Lawrence and Wishart 1978.
80
Rogaly J. Grunwick. Harmondsworth: : Penguin 1977.
81
Grunwick: Scarman Report (Court of Inquiry Report) | Margaret Thatcher Foundation. http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/111943
82
Beckett A. When the lights went out: what really happened to Britain in the seventies. London: : Faber and Faber 2009.
83
McGowan J. ‘Dispute’, ‘Battle’, ‘Siege’, ‘Farce’?—Grunwick 30 Years On. Contemporary British History 2008;22:383–406. doi:10.1080/13619460701731921
84
Striking Women: Voices of South Asian women workers from Grunwick and Gate Gourmet. http://www.leeds.ac.uk/strikingwomen/about
85
University of Edinburgh, MacInnes J. Scottish affairs. 1995;11:73–95.
86
Devine TM, Wormald J. The Oxford handbook of modern Scottish history. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2012. http://ezproxy.lib.gla.ac.uk/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199563692.001.0001
87
Phillips J. Oceanspan: Deindustrialisation and Devolution in Scotland, c. 1960–1974. Scottish Historical Review 2005;84:63–84. doi:10.3366/shr.2005.84.1.63
88
Phillips J. Deindustrialization and the Moral Economy of the Scottish Coalfields, 1947 to 1991. International Labor and Working-Class History 2013;84:99–115. doi:10.1017/S0147547913000264
89
Cameron EA, MyiLibrary. Impaled upon a thistle: Scotland since 1880. Edinburgh: : Edinburgh University Press 2010. http://lib.myilibrary.com/browse/open.asp?id=261999&entityid=https://idp.gla.ac.uk/shibboleth
90
Macdonald CMM. Whaur extremes meet: Scotland’s twentieth century. Edinburgh: : John Donald 2009.
91
Mitchell J, Oxford University Press. The Scottish question. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2014. http://ezproxy.lib.gla.ac.uk/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199688654.001.0001
92
Buchan A. The right to work: the story of the Upper Clyde confrontation. London: : Calder and Boyars 1972.
93
The Nation//Live-Work, ‘A Reconstruction of Clydebank Voices’ and ‘Remembering the Work-in’. https://www.nationalgalleries.org/education/projects/the-nation-live/work/
94
UCS Work In Upper Clyde - 40 Years On - Lessons For Today. http://www.clydebanktuc.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=19:ucs-work-in-upper-clyde-40-years-on-lessons-for-today&catid=3:videos&Itemid=24
95
Foster J, Woolfson C. The politics of the UCS work-in: class alliances and the right to work. London: : Lawrence and Wishart 1986.
96
Campbell A, Fishman N, McIlroy J. British trade unions and industrial politics. Aldershot: : Ashgate 1999.
97
Phillips J. The industrial politics of devolution: Scotland in the 1960s and 1970s. Manchester: : Manchester University Press 2008.
98
Campbell A, Fishman N, McIlroy J. British trade unions and industrial politics. Aldershot: : Ashgate 1999.
99
Lindop F. Historical studies in industrial relations. 1998;6:65–100.
100
Campbell A, Fishman N, McIlroy J. British trade unions and industrial politics. Aldershot: : Ashgate 1999.
101
Phillips J. The 1972 Miners’ Strike: Popular Agency and Industrial Politics in Britain. Contemporary British History 2006;20:187–207. doi:10.1080/13619460600600748
102
Taylor R. The trade union question in British politics: government and unions since 1945. Oxford: : Blackwell 1993.
103
Gold M. Worker Directors in the UK and the Limits of Policy Transfer from Europe since the 1970s. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2005;:29–65. doi:10.3828/hsir.2005.20.2
104
Gold M. Worker Mobilization in the 1970s: Revisiting Work-ins, Co-operatives and Alternative Corporate Plans. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2004;:65–106. doi:10.3828/hsir.2004.18.2
105
Phillips J. Business and the limited reconstruction of industrial relations in the UK in the 1970s. Business History 2009;51:801–16. doi:10.1080/00076790903268253
106
Phillips J. UK Business Power and Opposition to the Bullock Committee’s 1977 Proposals on Worker Directors. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2011;:1–30. doi:10.3828/hsir.2011.31-32.2
107
Beckett A. When the lights went out: what really happened to Britain in the seventies. London: : Faber and Faber 2009.
108
Miller J. Turf Wars: Stable Lads’ Strikes and Union Recognition in the Twentieth Century. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2013;:111–40. doi:10.3828/hsir.2013.34.5
109
Segars T. The Labour Government and the First National Fire Service Strike, 1977-1978. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2010;:99–118. doi:10.3828/hsir.2010.29-30.4
110
Smith P. The ‘Winter of Discontent’: The Hire and Reward Road Haulage Dispute, 1979. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 1999;:27–54. doi:10.3828/hsir.1999.7.2
111
Taylor R. The trade union question in British politics: government and unions since 1945. Oxford: : Blackwell 1993.
112
NARRATING CRISIS: THE DISCURSIVE CONSTRUCTION OF THE ‘WINTER OF DISCONTENT’ on JSTOR. http://ezproxy.lib.gla.ac.uk/login?url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/42855681
113
Howell C. The British Variety of Capitalism: Institutional Change, Industrial Relations and British Politics. British Politics 2007;2:239–63. doi:10.1057/palgrave.bp.4200050
114
Conservative Party Political Broadcast (Winter of Discontent) | Margaret Thatcher Foundation. http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/103926
115
HC S: [Her Majesty’s Government (Opposition Motion) (motion of confidence)] [audio] | Margaret Thatcher Foundation. http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/111296
116
Brotherstone T, Pirani S. Were There Alternatives? Movements From Below In The Scottish Coalfield, The Communist Party, And Thatcherism, 1981–1985. Critique 2005;33:99–124. doi:10.1080/03017600509469489
117
Perchard A, Phillips J. Transgressing the Moral Economy: Wheelerism and Management of the Nationalised Coal Industry in Scotland. Contemporary British History 2011;25:387–405. doi:10.1080/13619462.2011.597550
118
Phillips J. Workplace Conflict and the Origins of the 1984-85 Miners’ Strike in Scotland. Twentieth Century British History 2009;20:152–72. doi:10.1093/tcbh/hwn047
119
Dorey P. ‘It Was Just Like Arming to Face the Threat of Hitler in the Late 1930s.’ The Ridley Report and the Conservative Party’s Preparations for the 1984-85 Miners’ Strike. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2013;:173–214. doi:10.3828/hsir.2013.34.7
120
Phillips J. Containing, Isolating, and Defeating the Miners: The UK Cabinet Ministerial Group on Coal and the Three Phases of the 1984-85 Strike. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2014;:117–41. doi:10.3828/hsir.2014.35.5
121
Saville J. The Socialist register. 1985;22:295–329.
122
Speech to 1922 Committee (‘the enemy within’) | Margaret Thatcher Foundation. http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/105563
123
Ackers P. Gramsci at the miners’ strike: remembering the 1984–1985 Eurocommunist alternative industrial relations strategy. Labor History 2014;55:151–72. doi:10.1080/0023656X.2014.884866
124
Griffin C. ‘Notts. have some very peculiar history’: Understanding the Reaction of the Nottinghamshire Miners to the 1984-85 Strike. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 2005;:63–99. doi:10.3828/hsir.2005.19.3
125
Jackson B, Saunders R. Making Thatcher’s Britain. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2012. http://ezproxy.lib.gla.ac.uk/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511998164
126
Hyman R. The Socialist register. 1985;22:330–54.
127
Scottish Labour History Society, Stewart D. Scottish labour history. 2006;41:34–50.
128
Kelliher D. Solidarity and Sexuality: Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners 1984-5. History Workshop Journal 2014;77:240–62. doi:10.1093/hwj/dbt012
129
PHILLIPS J. Material and moral resources: the 1984-5 miners’ strike in Scotland. The Economic History Review 2012;65:256–76. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0289.2010.00594.x
130
Spence J, Stephenson C. "Side by Side With Our Men?” Women’s Activism, Community, and Gender in the 1984–1985 British Miners’ Strike. International Labor and Working-Class History 2009;75. doi:10.1017/S0147547909000064
131
Phillips J. Collieries, communities and the miners’ strike in Scotland 1984-85. Manchester: : Manchester University Press 2012. http://ezproxy.lib.gla.ac.uk/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9780719086328.001.0001
132
Collins C, McCartney G. The impact of neoliberal ‘political attack’ on health : the case of the ‘Scottish effect’. International journal of health services 2011;41.https://eleanor.lib.gla.ac.uk/patroninfo~S6?/0/redirect=https://eleanor.lib.gla.ac.uk:443/search~S6?/rWork+and+Labour+in+Britain+Since+1940/rwork+and+labour+in+britain+since+1940/1,1,1,E/l962~3092336&FF=rwork+and+labour+in+britain+since+1940&1,1,,0,0
133
MacInnes J. Scottish affairs. 1992;11:73–95.
134
Devine TM, Wormald J, Ebooks Corporation Limited. The Oxford handbook of modern Scottish history. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2012. http://ezproxy.lib.gla.ac.uk/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199563692.001.0001
135
Phillips J. Deindustrialization and the Moral Economy of the Scottish Coalfields, 1947 to 1991. International Labor and Working-Class History 2013;84:99–115. doi:10.1017/S0147547913000264
136
Beatty C, Fothergill S. Labour Market Adjustment in Areas of Chronic Industrial Decline: The Case of the UK Coalfields. Regional Studies 1996;30:627–40. doi:10.1080/00343409612331349928
137
Glucksmann MA. Call configurations: varieties of call centre and divisions of labour. Work, Employment & Society 2004;18:795–811. doi:10.1177/0950017004047965
138
Standing G, Dawson Books. The precariat: the new dangerous class. London: : Bloomsbury Academic 2011. https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://idp.gla.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9781849664547
139
Taylor P, Bain P. ‘An assembly line in the head’: work and employee relations in the call centre. Industrial Relations Journal 1999;30:101–17. doi:10.1111/1468-2338.00113
140
Taylor P. ‘India calling to the far away towns’: the call centre labour process and globalization. Work, Employment & Society 2005;19:261–82. doi:10.1177/0950017005053170
141
Foden M. The State of the Coalfields: economic and social conditions in the former mining communities of England, Scotland and Wales. 2014.http://www.shu.ac.uk/research/cresr/sites/shu.ac.uk/files/state-of-the-coalfields.pdf
142
Perchard A. "Broken Men” and "Thatcher’s Children”: Memory and Legacy in Scotland’s Coalfields. International Labor and Working-Class History 2013;84:78–98. doi:10.1017/S0147547913000252
143
Turnbull P, Wass V. The Greatest Game no more - Redundant Dockers and the Demise of `Dock Work’. Work, Employment & Society 1994;8:487–506. doi:10.1177/095001709484001
144
Wight D. Workers not wasters: masculine respectability, consumption and unemployment in central Scotland : a community study. Edinburgh: : Edinburgh University Press 1993.
145
Bradley H. No more heroes? Reflections on the 20th anniversary of the miners’ strike and the culture of opposition. Work, Employment & Society 2008;22:337–49. doi:10.1177/0950017008089108
146
High S. Beyond Aesthetics: Visibility and Invisibility in the Aftermath of Deindustrialization. International Labor and Working-Class History 2013;84:140–53. doi:10.1017/S0147547913000276
147
Women, Wives and the Campaign against Pit Closures in County Durham: Understanding the Vane Tempest Vigil on JSTOR. http://ezproxy.lib.gla.ac.uk/login?url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/1395546
148
Strangleman T. Networks, Place and Identities in Post-industrial Mining Communities. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 2001;25:253–67. doi:10.1111/1468-2427.00310