ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1972, The University and British Industry examines the lively and controversial relationship between British industry and the university. The book looks at the impact of industry on the development of British universities from the 1850s to the 1970s, and with contribution from the universities to industry through scientific research and the supply of graduate skills. The book argues that the close involvement of the universities and industry has been one of the chief beneficial forces shaping the British universities movement in the last hundred years. It gives an account of the changes which took place within the universities to make them more suitable for industries purposes, describing for example the early rise of the English civic universities, strongly financed by, and closely supporting industry. The book also considers how, during the two world wars, industry became highly reliant on the universities for the war technology, and how, despite the depression between the wars, university research and graduate employment embraced the widening opportunities of the new industries. The book also discusses the expansion of the university in the sixties and points out that industrial motives have merged with those of social justice, posing dilemmas for present and future relations between universities and industry.

chapter 1|30 pages

The Conditions of Involvement

chapter 2|30 pages

Oxford, Cambridge and Industry 1850–1914

chapter 3|34 pages

The Civic Universities 1850-1914—I

chapter 4|26 pages

The Civic Universities 1850-1914—II

chapter 5|25 pages

The Welsh Universities Movement 1850-1914

chapter 6|32 pages

The Scottish Universities 1850-1914

chapter 7|30 pages

The Arts of Commerce 1890-1914

chapter 8|29 pages

The Universities and the War 1914-18

chapter 9|33 pages

The Inter-war Years 1919-39—I

chapter 10|38 pages

The Inter-war Years 1919-39—II

chapter 12|21 pages

War and Post-war 1939-59

chapter 13|29 pages

The Sixties

chapter |9 pages

Conclusion