Winner of the Australia and New Zealand Law and History Society (ANZLHS) Prize for 2023 Maritime workers occupy a central place in global labour history. This new and compelling account from Australia, shows seafaring and waterside unions engaged in a shared history of activism for legally regulated wages and safe liveable conditions for all who go to sea. Maritime Men of the Asia-Pacific provides a corrective to studies which overlook this region’s significance as a provider of the world’s maritime labour force and where unions have a rich history of reaching across their differences to forge connections in solidarity. From the ‘militant young Australian’ Harry Bridges whose progressive unionism transformed the San Francisco waterfront, to Australia’s successful implementation of the Maritime Labour Convention 2006, this is a story of vision and leadership on the international stage. Unionists who saw themselves as internationalists were also operating within a national and imperial framework where conflicting interests and differences of race and ideology had to be overcome. Union activists in India, China and Japan struggled against indentured labour and ‘coolie’ standards. They linked with their fellow-unionists in pursuing an ideal of international labour rights against the power of shipowners and anti-union governments. This is a complex story of endurance, cooperation and conflict and its empowering legacy.
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Winner of the Australia and New Zealand Law and History Society (ANZLHS) Prize for 2023 Maritime workers occupy a central place in global labour history.
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1: ‘By the nature of their calling’ Themes of region, race and militancy
Chapter 2: ‘Navigation as it affects the Empire’: Australasian Labour Standards and British Merchant Shipping
Chapter 3: ‘The Commonwealth and the Lascars’: Protecting Maritime Workers in a White Australia 1901-1914
Chapter 4: ‘to break down the barriers which separate races and countries’: Socialists, Maritime Unions and Organising Internationally Before 1920
Chapter 5: ‘Our duty is to foster a spirit of internationality’: Maritime Unions and International Labour Organising in the Aftermath of War
Chapter 6: ‘To ensure…fair conditions of labor’: Navigating Class, Nation and Empire in 1920s
Chapter 7: ‘Seamen of the Orient’: Globalising the ITF and Embracing Asia c.1920s-30s
Chapter 8: ‘Lascar Seamen Stand Up for Rights’: Asserting Independence c.1930s-1949
Chapter 9: ‘… standards for all seamen, Indian, Chinese and European’: Internationalism in the Cold War Asia-Pacific Chapter 10: ‘Bogey-men of the Pacific’: Trans-Pacific Dockworker Organising, 1940s-60s
Chapter 11: ‘Giving us a voice in world affairs’: International Leadership and Activism, 1960-80
Chapter 12: ‘protect[ing] workers against shoddy foreign companies’: International Labourers and National Unionists, 1960s-2000
Conclusion
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‘While maintaining a focus on their Australian and New Zealand central actors, Kirkby et. al. offer a comprehensive examination of seafaring and dock labor conflicts across the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Altogether, an impressive tribute to the marriage of scholarly resolve with underlying democratic political idealism.’ Leon Fink, Distinguished Professor Emeritus in the Department of History at the University of Illinois, Chicago
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781802077193
Publisert
2023-01-01
Utgiver
Vendor
Liverpool University Press
Høyde
239 mm
Bredde
163 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
352
Forfatter