Abstract
Structural, organizational, and technological changes in British industry
during the interwar years led to a decline in skilled and physically
demanding work, while there was a dramatic expansion in unskilled and
semiskilled employment. Previous authors have noted that the new
un/semiskilled jobs were generally filled by “fresh” workers
recruited from outside the core manufacturing workforce, though there is
considerable disagreement regarding the composition of this new
workforce. This paper examines labour recruitment patterns and strategies
using national data and case studies of eight rapidly expanding industrial
centres. The new industrial workforce is shown to have been recruited from
a “reserve army” of workers with the common features of relative
cheapness, flexibility, and weak unionization. These included women,
juveniles, local workers in poorly paid nonindustrial sectors, such as
agriculture, and (where these other categories were in short supply)
relatively young long-distance internal migrants from declining industrial
areas.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Social Sciences (miscellaneous),History
Cited by
8 articles.
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