1st Edition

Unemployment

Edited By Bernard Crick Copyright 1981
    162 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book was originally published in 1981 at a time when mass unemployment had returned to the United Kingdom. Now reissued with a new Preface by the author's literary executor, the essays in this volume discuss in detail the damage that was being done to the community and the economy at national and regional levels as a result of government policy. There are chapters on the political and economic aspects of the problem, on the comparison with the inter-war years, on youth unemployment and on unemployment in each of the regions worst affected. The collection as a whole provides an authoritative overview of a central political issue of the late 20th Century but one which still has resonance today as the post-Covid, post-Brexit UK economy teeters on the edge of recession.

    1.Commentary Bernard Crick 2. Unemployment Now and in the 1930s Jeremy Seabrook 3. View From a Disaster Area: Unemployed Youth in Merseyside F. F. Ridley 4. Economic Aspects of Unemployment Maurice Peston 5. Political Aspects of Unemployment: The Alternative Policy Austin Mitchell 6 The North East: Back to the 1930s? Ben Pimlott 7. De-Industrialisation and Unemployment in the West Midlands Stan Taylor 8. South Yorkshire: The Economic and Social Impact of Unemployment Alan Walker 9. Unemployment and Wages in Northern Ireland N. J. Gibson and J. E. Spencer 10. Wage Bargaining and Unemployment Sean Glynn and Stephen Shaw 11. Wales: Will Unemployment Bred Unrest or Apathy? John Osmond 12. Unemployment: The Past and Future of a Political Problem Keith Middlemas

    Biography

    Professor Sir Bernard Crick (1929-2008) was a British political theorist, and democratic socialist. As well as being a career academic he was the author of many books focused on democracy and socialism, and the editor of Hansard and the Political Quarterly. He was also an advisor to Neil Kinnock’s labour party in the 1980s, and also to the SDLP in Northern Ireland during the troubles. Working for his former student, Home Secretary David Blunkett, he created a cross party framework that ended in the Crick Report, which brought ‘citizenship’ onto the National Curriculum He was knighted for this work. His doctoral thesis was published as The American Science of Politics (1958), and as well as George Orwell’s biography (1980), he authored In Defence of Politics(1962). Originally teaching at the London School of Economics, he then spent some time teaching at Harvard University, and was Professor of Politics at both Sheffield University and Birkbeck University.