1st Edition

Governance, Industry and Labour Markets in Britain and France The Modernizing State

By Robert Salais, Noel Whiteside Copyright 1998

    This volume brings together well-known scholars from a wide range of disciplines to provide a superb analytical and historical overview of how state policy has affected established economic and labour market systems in France and Britain.
    The contributors to this book explore some crucial questions:
    * how 'dirigiste' was the French state in reality
    * why was state intervention more acceptable in France than in Britain
    * how do the differences in state intervention help to explain the respective economic performances of the two countries since the second world war?
    The book draws on hitherto unpublished primary research by scholars in economic and social history, industrial relations, economics, law, political science, sociology and social policy. As such, it is a timely and welcome intervention into debates concerning the politics of modern labour markets specifically and the role of the state in economic modernization more widely. It will have strong appeal to researchers and students in several discplines.

    1: Introduction; I: Modernisation and the Sphere of Industrial Politics; 2: Companies Under Public Control in France, 1900–1950; 3: The Government, Full Employment and the Politics of Industrial Efficiency in Britain, 1945–1951; 4: The ‘Real' World of the Engineering and Electrical Industries in the Parisian Basin; 5: Americanisation and its Limits; 6: Training Engineers in Lorraine, 1890–1956 1; 7: Technical Training of Youth in Britain; II: Regulating Labour Markets; 8: Arbitration in Context; 9: Collective Agreements in France in the 1930s; 10: France and Unemployment Insurance From 1920 To 1958; 11: The Evolution of the Contract of Employment, 1900–1950; 12: Industrial Relations in Iron and Steel, Shipbuilding and the Docks, 1930–1960; 13: State Regulation and Industrial Organisation; 14: The State and the Labour Market

    Biography

    Robert Salais, Noel Whiteside

    `Deakin's chapter contains an original argument but is also a useful review of the subject that any non-specialist could read comfortably.' - David Geary, Labour History Review