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Labour united and divided from the 1830s to the present
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10 August 2018

POLITICAL SCIENCE / Comparative Politics, Politics and government, HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / 20th Century, HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / 21st Century, Comparative politics, Political parties and party platforms, Left-of-centre democratic ideologies, Trade unions
Introduction: The British labour movement between unity and division - Emmanuelle Avril and Yann Béliard
Part I: Labour’s first century: disputed solidarities
1 The Grand National Consolidated Trades’ Union, 1833-1834. Class and conflict in the early British labour movement – Ophélie Siméon
2 The Knights of Labor and the British trade unions, 1880-1900 – Steven Parfitt
3 The struggle for control of the Durham Miners’ Association, 1890s-1915 – Lewis H. Mates
4Contested coordinator. The Hull Trades Council, 1872-1914 – Yann Béliard
5 Domestic servants and the labour movement, 1870s-1914: a ‘race apart’? – Anna Clark
Part II: Convergences, divergences and realignments on the left
6 ‘The people’s main defence against monopoly’? The Co-op, the Labour Party, and Resale Price Maintenance, 1918-1964 – David Stewart
7 The British Left’s attitude towards the Battle of Athens, December 1944 – February 1945: commonalities and divisions – Anastasia Chartomatsidi
8 The decline of revolutionary pragmatism and the splintering of British Communism in the 1980s – Jeremy Tranmer
9 Re-framing the debate on breakaway trade unions in an era of neoliberalism – David Evans.
10 English teachers’ unions since 2010. ‘A teachers’ lobby divided against itself’? – Anne Beauvallet
Part III: The Labour Party today: fragmentation or mutation?
11 Dissent in the Parliamentary Labour Party, 1945-2015 – Nick Randall
12 ‘What dire effects from civil discord flow’: Party management and legitimacy breakdown in the Labour Party – Eric Shaw
13 The conflicting loyalties of the Scottish Labour Party – Fiona Simpkins
14 The ‘movementisation’ of the Labour Party and the future of labour organising – Emmanuelle Avril
Concluding remarks – Emmanuelle Avril & Yann Béliard
Index