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E-raamat: Shipbuilding and Ship Repair Workers around the World: Case Studies 1950-2010

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Maritime trade is the backbone of the world’s economy. Around ninety percent of all goods are transported by ship, and since World War II, shipbuilding has undergone major changes in response to new commercial pressures and opportunities. Early British dominance, for example, was later undermined in the 1950s by competition from the Japanese, who have since been overtaken by South Korea and, most recently, China. The case studies in this volume trace these and other important developments in the shipbuilding and ship repair industries, as well as workers’ responses to these historic transformations.
1 Introduction
15(32)
Marcel van der Linden
Hugh Murphy
Raquel Varela
North-western Europe
2 Labour in the British shipbuilding and ship repairing industries in the twentieth century
47(70)
Hugh Murphy
3 Bremer Vulkan
A Case Study of the West German shipbuilding industry and its narratives in the second half of the twentieth century
117(26)
Johanna Wolf
4 From boom to bust Kockums, Malmo (Sweden), 1950--1986
143(22)
Tobias Karlsson
5 The Norwegian shipbuilding industry after 1945 Production systems, rationalisation, and labour relations, with special reference to Bergens Mekaniske Verksteder and Aker Stord
165(28)
Hans-Jakob Agotnes
Jan Heiret
6 From war reparations to luxury cruise liners Production changes and labour relations at the Turku shipyard (Finland) between 1950 and 2010
193(28)
Kari Teras
7 The Dutch shipbuilding industry, 1950--2012
221(28)
Sjaak van der Velden
Southern and Eastern Europe
8 Always on the verge of sinking Labour and production in the Sestri Ponente shipyard, Genoa (Italy), 1950--2014
249(32)
Giulia Strippoli
Davide Tabor
Luciano Villani
9 Work, workers, and labour conflicts in the shipyard Bazan/Navantia-Ferrol, Galicia (Spain), 1950--2014
281(24)
Jose Gomez Alen
10 Against market rules A Spanish shipyard nobody wanted (except workers)
305(14)
Ruben Vega Garcia
11 Labour relations in a Portuguese shipyard The case of Setenave
319(20)
Jorge Fontes
12 Work in the Portuguese shipyards of Lisnave From the right to work to precariousness of employment
339(26)
Raquel Varela
Ana Rajado
13 The Gdansk Shipyard
Production regime and workers' conflicts in the 1970s and 1980s in the People's Republic of Poland*
365(32)
Sarah Graber Majchrzak
14 The shipbuilding industry in Galati (Romania) under communism, 1948--1989
397(24)
Constantin Ardeleanu
The Americas and Australia
15 Charting a new course US shipbuilding labour, 1950--2014
421(16)
Robin Dearmon Muhammad
16 The Argentinean shipbuilding industry Workers' struggles in a state shipyard
437(20)
Cintia Russo
17 Production and labour of a state-owned enterprise A case study of an Argentinean shipyard, Astillero Rio Santiago
457(20)
Juliana Frassa
18 Labour in the Brazilian shipbuilding industry A contribution to an analysis of the recovery period
477(14)
Claudiana Guedes de Jesus
19 Brazilian shipbuilding and workers between tradition and innovation Shipyards Caneco/Rio Nave and Maua -- Rio de Janeiro, 1950--2014
491(28)
Elina G. da Fonte Pessanha
Luisa Barbosa Pereira
20 Cockatoo Island, Australia Industry, labour, and protest culture
519(28)
Lisa Milner
Asia
21 Evolution and development of the shipbuilding industry in Bharati Shipyard Ltd, Maharashtra (India), from the 1970s to 2010 Employer, employee, and production perspectives
547(16)
S.M. Fahimuddin Pasha
22 Shipbuilding and shipbuilders in Thailand
563(28)
Nicola Mocci
23 The lower labour market and the development of the post-war Japanese shipbuilding industry
591(24)
Takeshi Haraguchi
Kazuya Sakurada
24 The evolution of labour relations in the South Korean shipbuilding industry A case study of Hanjin Heavy Industries, 1950--2014
615(22)
Wonchul Shin
25 China, Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, and Vietnam
637(20)
Hugh Murphy
26 Some final observations
657(8)
Hugh Murphy
Marcel van der Linden
Appendix 1 The effects of the oil price shocks on shipbuilding in the 1970s 665(10)
Hugh Murphy
Stig Tenold
Appendix 2 Shipbuilding in 2013: an analysis of shipbuilding statistics 675(8)
Victoria Culkin
Glossary of shipping and shipbuilding terms 683(16)
Collective bibliography 699(32)
Notes on contributors 731(10)
Index 741
Raquel Varela : Researcher at the Institute for Contemporary History of Universidade Nova de Lisboa, where she coordinates the Study Group on Global History of Labour and Social Conflicts. Recent book: História do Povo na Revolução Portuguesa 1974-1975 (Lisbon, 2014). Hugh Murphy: Visiting Reader in Maritime History, National Maritime Museum, Royal Museums Greenwich and Professor in the Department of Economic and Social History, University of Glasgow. He has published widely on business and economic history, particularly on the history of British shipbuilding during the twentieth century. Marcel van der Linden : Senior Research Fellow at IISH, the institution of which he has been the research director between 2001 and 2014. He is also Professor of Social Movement History at the University of Amsterdam. Recent book: Workers of the World. Essays toward a Global Labor History (Leiden and Boston, 2010).