Description

Book Synopsis
The city of Liverpool had frequently been prone to industrial unrest for most of its recent history, but it was the dawn of Thatcher and the sanctioning of neoliberal economic strategies which made Liverpool a nucleus of resistance against the encroaching tide of right-wing politics and sweeping de-industrialisation. This critique explores six case studies which will illustrate how elements of a highly politicised local working-class fought against the rapid rise in forced redundancies and industrial closures. Some of their responses included strikes, factory occupations, the organisation and politicisation of the unemployed, consent to radical left-wing municipal politics, as well as tacit endorsement a period of violent civil unrest. This critique concludes that in the range, intensity and use of innovative tactics deployed during these conflicts, Liverpool was distinctive.

Trade Review

‘Overall, Brian Marren has produced a very good book which for many years to come, will certainly contribute to the debate about political activism during the Thatcher years. Furthermore, through the gradual release of government archives and as historians begin to research the 1980s in greater depth, this study will in no doubt, feature in a number of books and articles about Liverpool and the Merseyside region, especially when reflecting how far the city has travelled and progressed over the past few decades.’
Neil Pye, University of Huddersfield, Labour History Review

-- .

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. Unravelling of the post-war consensus and the peculiarities of Liverpool
2. Employment and unemployment on Merseyside, 1945–98
3. British Leyland’s closure of the Triumph TR7 Plant in Speke: ‘The Shape of Things to Come’?
4. The TGWU 6/612 Branch for the Unemployed: Working-Class Politicisation and Mobilisation
5. The Toxteth Riots, 1981: unemployed youth take to the streets
6. The Militant Tendency and the Liverpool City Council’s fight to save ‘jobs and services’, 1983–86
7. Sit-ins and factory occupations: a case study of Cammell Laird Shipyards
8. The Liverpool Dock Strike of 1995–98: the end of the line?
Conclusion
Bibliography

We Shall Not be Moved: How Liverpool's Working

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    A Paperback / softback by Brian Marren

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      View other formats and editions of We Shall Not be Moved: How Liverpool's Working by Brian Marren

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 22/05/2018
      ISBN13: 9781526132963, 978-1526132963
      ISBN10: 1526132966

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The city of Liverpool had frequently been prone to industrial unrest for most of its recent history, but it was the dawn of Thatcher and the sanctioning of neoliberal economic strategies which made Liverpool a nucleus of resistance against the encroaching tide of right-wing politics and sweeping de-industrialisation. This critique explores six case studies which will illustrate how elements of a highly politicised local working-class fought against the rapid rise in forced redundancies and industrial closures. Some of their responses included strikes, factory occupations, the organisation and politicisation of the unemployed, consent to radical left-wing municipal politics, as well as tacit endorsement a period of violent civil unrest. This critique concludes that in the range, intensity and use of innovative tactics deployed during these conflicts, Liverpool was distinctive.

      Trade Review

      ‘Overall, Brian Marren has produced a very good book which for many years to come, will certainly contribute to the debate about political activism during the Thatcher years. Furthermore, through the gradual release of government archives and as historians begin to research the 1980s in greater depth, this study will in no doubt, feature in a number of books and articles about Liverpool and the Merseyside region, especially when reflecting how far the city has travelled and progressed over the past few decades.’
      Neil Pye, University of Huddersfield, Labour History Review

      -- .

      Table of Contents

      Introduction
      1. Unravelling of the post-war consensus and the peculiarities of Liverpool
      2. Employment and unemployment on Merseyside, 1945–98
      3. British Leyland’s closure of the Triumph TR7 Plant in Speke: ‘The Shape of Things to Come’?
      4. The TGWU 6/612 Branch for the Unemployed: Working-Class Politicisation and Mobilisation
      5. The Toxteth Riots, 1981: unemployed youth take to the streets
      6. The Militant Tendency and the Liverpool City Council’s fight to save ‘jobs and services’, 1983–86
      7. Sit-ins and factory occupations: a case study of Cammell Laird Shipyards
      8. The Liverpool Dock Strike of 1995–98: the end of the line?
      Conclusion
      Bibliography

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