ABSTRACT

For too long the collective struggles of the oppressed over welfare provision and welfare settlement have been ignored, yet such struggles punctuate recent British history. By presenting a series of case-studies of episodes of collective action from the field of social policy and social welfare, Class Struggle and Welfare aims to rediscover this 'hidden history'.
Organised chronologically, the book covers some of the most important welfare struggles from the early nineteenth century, some of the issues covered are:
*the growth of capitalism
*the development of the poor laws and the anti-poor law movement
*working class self-help welfare in the nineteenth century
*rent strikes on the Clyde in 1920s
*the squatters movement in the 1950s
*the struggle for abortion rights
*an analysis of the urban riots in the 1980s
*the great poll tax rebellion.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Class Struggle and Social Policy

chapter |25 pages

‘The Clyde Rent War!'

The Clydebank Rent Strike of the 1920s

chapter |21 pages

The Making of a Poor People's Movement

A Study of the Political Leadership of Poplarism, 1919–25

chapter |22 pages

The ‘Two Souls of Socialism'

The Labour Movement and Unemployment During the 1920s and 1930s

chapter |26 pages

Riots and Urban Unrest in Britain in the 1980s and 1990s

A Critique of Dominant Explanations 1

chapter |29 pages

‘No Poll Tax Here!'

The Tories, Social Policy and the Great Poll Tax Rebellion 1987–1991

chapter |22 pages

Identity Politics or Class Struggle?

The Case of the Mental Health Users' Movement.