labour movement
labour movement A term applied descriptively to include all organizations representing workers who sell their effort in the labour-market. A labour movement may be divided heuristically into its industrial and political wings: the former consists of
trade unions as well as other voluntary associations seeking narrowly defined economic objectives, such as higher wages, greater
industrial democracy, or industrial education; the latter comprises one or more
political parties attempting to influence or control
state power on behalf of labour. Historically, labour movements have been very fragmented; there is a long-running theoretical debate about this because of the profound influence of
Marxism and
socialism within labour organizations. These have tended to view labour movements holistically, as embodying the organized working class or
proletariat, thus implying an underlying momentum towards unity between the various elements. Even so, disagreement exists about revolutionary strategy, between
syndicalist expectations of the working class seizing political control through organized industrial action alone, and the Leninist view that trade-union action must give way to political struggle. Students of the labour movement of a more conservative cast of mind have tended to reflect the outlook of Selig Perlman, a pioneer of labour-relations studies in the United States. Strongly influenced by the example of the American working class, Perlman claimed that labour movements embody what he called a communism of opportunity, expressing limited occupational and communal loyalties, rather than a communism of the intellectuals which sought to unify the whole working class. Certainly, in recent years, much greater attention has been given to the historical, cultural, and institutional diversity of the labour movements of different industrial societies (see M. Regini ( ed.) ,
The Future of Labour Movements, 1992
).
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
The memory of Edith Cavell.(LETTERS)(Letter to the editor)
Magazine article from: The Lamp; 8/1/2008; ; 680 words
; ...good news that I benefited from an Edith Cavell Scholarship to attend a conference...distant memories of family ties with Edith Cavell's family and ours during the...Manning and his wife, the sister of Edith Cavell. When the Great War finished...
|
|
Cavell, Edith: Silent in an Evil Time: The Brave War of Edith Cavell.(Brief article)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Biography; 1/1/2008; ; 434 words
; Cavell, Edith Silent in an Evil Time: The Brave War of Edith Cavell. Jack Battan. Toronto: Tundra, 2007...18.99. Ages 10 and up. Nurse Edith Cavell "was shot by a firing squad in Brussels...
|
|
May 15 1919: Edith Cavell reburied in Norwich.(MONTHS PAST)
Magazine article from: History Today; 5/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...moves were made to bring Edith Cavell back from Brussels to...a fine 1920 statue of Edith Cavell by Sir George Frampton near Trafalgar Square and a Cavell Street in Whitechapel. In France and Belgium, Edith was a popular name for...
|
|
Desperate last days of a war heroine; Open secret: MI5 files tell the truth of nurse Edith Cavell's capture and execution.(News)
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 5/9/2002; 691 words
; Nurse Edith Cavell, the great heroine of the First World War, issued a desperate...spy can obtain, and just as effective.' CAPTION(S): Edith Cavell; The grave of Edith Cavell somewhere in France. The photograph was released by the Public...
|
|
Batten, Jack. Silent in an evil time; the brave war of Edith Cavell.(Young adult review)(Brief article)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Kliatt; 11/1/2007; ; 609 words
; ...an evil time; the brave war of Edith Cavell. Tundra. 135p. illus. bibliog...nursing, and women's studies. Edith Cavell was an English woman who became...avoid capture. Some were wounded. Edith Cavell hid more than 1000 English soldiers...
|
|
THE HEROINE WHO HUMBLED ME HUMBLEDME; A new book by GORDON BROWN salutes the women who've inspired him. Here, in an exclusive extract, he tells the extraordinary story of Edith Cavell, the British nurse who faced a German firing squad for saving hundreds of First World War soldiers.
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England); 4/26/2007; 700+ words
; ...morning of October 12, 1915, nurse Edith Cavell was driven to the Tir Nationale...the command to fire was given and Edith Cavell was shot dead. In the minutes...Institute in Brussels, became Edith Cavell, rescuer and saviour of scores...
|
|
Thank you for Edith Cavell Scholarship.(LETTER of the month)(Letter to the editor)
Magazine article from: The Lamp; 3/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; I am writing this letter to the trustees of the Edith Cavell Trust to inform them of my completion of the Bachelor...Australians. Ruth Guevarra, EEN Note from the Editor: The Edith Cavell Scholarship opens again on 1 May 2009 for the academic...
|
|
Heroic act of wartime nurse Edith cavell
Newspaper article from: Herald Express (Torquay UK); 11/19/2007; 493 words
; ...Pascoe. He gave a wonderful talk on the life of the nurse Edith Cavell, who was born in 1865 in East Anglia. Her father was...in London in remembrance. Mr Vincent said there is a Cavell Court and Freedom Fields mentioned in Plymouth. The...
|
|
Edith Cavell relics given to Britain
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 9/22/2000; 242 words
; THE CROSS from the prison grave of Edith Cavell, a British nurse executed by the Germans during the First World War, was donated to Britain by Belgium yesterday, along with the Union flag with which her coffin was covered and the last letter she wrote to fellow nurses.
|
|
Man missing from Edith Cavell hospital.
Newspaper article from: Peterborough Evening Telegraph (Peterborough, England); 1/11/2007; 428 words
; ...elderly man who has gone missing from a Peterborough hospital. Robert Watkins (72), discharged himself from the Edith Cavell Hospital in Bretton on Monday morning - and has not been seen since. Hospital staff are concerned that without his...
|
|
Cavell, Edith
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to British History
Cavell, Edith (1865–1915). The daughter of Frederick Cavell, vicar of Swardeston (Norfolk), Edith Cavell was a governess in Brussels before training as a nurse...
|
|
Edith Cavell
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Edith Cavell , 1865-1915, English nurse. When World War I broke out, she was head of the nursing staff of the Berkendael Medical Institute...
|
|
Cavell, Edith (Louisa)
Book article from: A Dictionary of World History
Cavell, Edith (Louisa) (1865–1915) British nurse. In charge of the Berkendael Medical Institute in Brussels during World War...
|
|
Frampton, Sir George
Book article from: A Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Art
...1911) in Kensington Gardens and the Edith Cavell memorial (1920) in St Martin...including Belgium, where Nurse Cavell was executed by the occupying Germans...Frampton's most popular work, the Cavell memorial has been much criticized...
|
|
Brand Whitlock
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...minister and ambassador to Belgium from 1913 to 1922 was distinguished for his efforts to defend the British nurse Edith Cavell and for his care of refugees. His later novels are surpassed by his nonfiction— Belgium: a Personal Record...
|