ABSTRACT
First published in 1967, Industrial Relations in the British Printing Industry was written to provide a comprehensive picture of the development of organisations of both employers and those employed in the British printing industry.
The book traces the story from the seventeenth century Craft Guilds and the Stationers Company, through the development of trade unions and union rule in the nineteenth century and up to the technical revolution of the early 1900s. Later chapters cover in detail problems such as restrictive practices and productivity bargaining in the thirty years prior to the original publication of the book. It also explores how their aims and strategies are related to changing technological and economic conditions.
Industrial Relations in the British Printing Industry will appeal to those with an interest in social history and the history of industrial relations, particularly with regards to the printing industry.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part One|32 pages
Control by Civil Authority
part Two|60 pages
Trade Societies and Trade Unions 1780–1848
part Three|48 pages
Regulation by Union Rule 1848–90
part Four|78 pages
Bilateral Bargaining 1890–1920
part Five|75 pages
Period of Compromise 1920–45
part Six|65 pages
The New World—Full Employment