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Race and riots in Thatcher's Britain
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21 January 2019

HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / 20th Century, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Discrimination, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Civil Rights, Ethnic groups and multicultural studies, Police and security services, Pressure groups, protest movements and non-violent action, Social discrimination and social justice, Social and cultural history, Political activism / Political engagement, Politics and government
'Overall, this book enlivens, reinterprets, and repurposes previous analyses of both black history and protest studies, bringing them into clearer focus. As a national study, it retains (primarily) a state-orientated focus, while using urban case studies to illuminate certain problems, with the Manchester and Liverpool case studies of greatest interest for Transactions readers. Peplow makes a convincing case in how we examine historic protest linked with race and ethnicity, and his approach can inform future studies, offering a natural continuation to Peter Shapely’s recent Deprivation, State Interventions and Urban Communities in Britain (Routledge 2018), which itself ends before the riot build-up Peplow covers after 1979.'
Dr Marc Collinson, Bangor University, Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire, Vol. 168, 2019
'An engaging, deeply researched and accessible contribution to the field – an excellent introduction to both the disorders of 1980–1981 and the processes and limitations of public inquiries. If it does not quite live up to the breadth signalled in the title, this is only an indication of the extent of research remaining to be performed in what is now a particularly timely area. For those wishing to carry out such research, or indeed involved in the types of struggle that form its subject, this book is an excellent place at which to begin.'
Social History
Introduction
1 Resistance to rebellion
2 ‘No other way to make their points of view known’? St Pauls, Bristol, 2 April 1980
3 Lacking conviction: inquiries and trials after Bristol
4 Escalation: Brixton, 10–12 April 1981
5 ‘The Brixton Defence Campaign says boycott the Scarman Inquiry’
6 A ‘conspicuous success’? Policing Liverpool and Manchester in July 1981
7 ‘Who the hell’s defending if they’re going to walk out of here?’ The Moss Side Defence Committee
Epilogue: ‘Turning point’ or ‘opportunity lost’? The legacy of 1980–1
Index