Anarchy 2

From Anarchy
Revision as of 18:05, 27 March 2017 by imported>Ivanhoe
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Contents of No. 2

April 1961


Workers’ Control: Looking for a movement C.W. 33
Approaches to industrial democracy Geoffrey Ostergaard 36
The gang system in Coventry Reg Wright 47
Workers’ control in the building industry James Lynch 53
Aspects of syndicalism in Spain, Sweden & U.S.A. Philip Holgate 56
Cover Rufus Segar  


Some Blackwell books on industry


The ‘Shop Stewards’ Movement and
Workers’ Control 1910-1922

by Branko Pribicevic
with a Foreword by G. D. H. Cole


British trade unions have pro­duced more un­offi­cial move­ments than have the unions of any other country. Un­doubtedly the most famous of these was the shop stewards’ move­ment in the engin­eer­ing in­dustry during and just after the First World War, which at times came close to taking over the leader­ship from the offi­cial unions; The move­ment also de­veloped a philo­sophy of its own—the doctrine of workers’ control. Ori­gin­ally the doc­trine was taken over from various sects of so­cial­ists and syn­dical­ists, but the shop stewards de­veloped it to suit their own needs in their struggle for control in the en­gin­eer­ing workshops.

25s. net


A New Approach to Industrial Democracy

by Hugh Clegg


An import­ant new con­tribu­tion to the dis­cus­sion of the possible forms of indus­trial demo­cracy.

18s. 6d. net


Decision-Making and Productivity

by Seymour Melman


In this study of the “worker decision-making” process at a Coventry factory Pro­fessor Melman seeks “to demon­strate that there are real­istic al­tern­at­ives to mana­gerial rule over pro­duc­tion”.

30s. net


The Employers’ Challenge

by Hugh Clegg and Rex Adams


This study of the Na­tional Ship­build­ing and Engin­eer­ing Dis­putes of 1957 con­cludes with an attempt to show why the employ­ers’ chal­lenge failed, and to draw some pro­vi­sional lessons from the dis­putes.

21s. net


order them from Freedom Bookshop

  (Open 2 p.m.-5.30 p.m. daily;
10 a.m.-1 p.m. Thursdays;
10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturdays).

17a MAXWELL ROAD
FULHAM SW6  Tel.: REN 3736




Still available:

ANARCHY 1: Rescuing Galbraith from the con­ven­tional wisdom; Sex-and-Violence and the origin of the novel (Alex Comfort) Education, equality, op­por­tun­ity (John Ellerby) The ‘new wave’ in Britain (Nicolas Walter).


Subscribe to ANARCHY …
single issues 1s. 6d. (or 25 cents) post free
twelve issues 19s. (or $3.00)

… and to FREEDOM as well

readers of ANARCHY will find FREEDOM the anarchist weekly indispensible, and a year’s subscription to both journals is offered at 30s. (or $5.00)

Cheques, P.O.’s and Money Orders should be made out to FREEDOM PRESS, crossed a/c payee, and addressed to the publishers.

FREEDOM PRESS
17a Maxwell Road,
London SW6 England
(Tel. Renown 3736)


ANARCHISM  WORKERS’ CONTROL  THE BOMB


Public meeting on Sunday 9th April at 7.15


Working Men’s Club Hall, Clerkenwell Rd. London EC1