A History of British Labour Law: 1867-1945

Front Cover
Hart Publishing, 2003 - Law - 259 pages

In the UK the received wisdom has tended to be that,historically, British labour law was abstentionist or non-interventionist, best epitomised by the words of Lord Wedderburn who has written that '...collective bargaining has developed in a system which depends very little on the law, which is covered by very few decisions of the judges, and which is controlled by statute very little, if at all.'. It is not until we reach the Industrial Relations Act 1971 that we discover the first attempt in peacetime to move to a legally regulated system. However, the accuracy of this non-interventionist depiction appears to very much depend on the period which is examined, which is why an historical perspective is needed in order to understand the significance of the current shape and scope of British labour law.

The aim of this work is to re-examine the received interpretation by looking at both the role given to law, and that anticipated and argued for it, during the most formative period of its development, the period between 1867 and 1945. The book also revisits the debate about war-time legislation which has tended to be viewed as standing apart from mainstream labour law but which the author demonstrates to have important linkages to the past and present.

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Contents

1 Labour Law 18671880
1
2 Labour Law 18801900
27
3 19001914
63
4 Responding to Taff Vale
87
5 The Impact of War 191418
119
6 The Aftermath of War 191821
149
7 Labour Law Between the Wars
183
8 The Impact of the Second World War
223
9 Concluding Remarks
249
Index
257
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About the author (2003)

Douglas Brodie is a Reader in Law at the University of Edinburgh.

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