The Way to Industrial Peace and the Problem of Unemployment
There is ample evidence that the nation has been deeply moved by the spectacle of thousands of men, in many parts of the country, and in many different industries, laying down their tools or suffering lockouts for the sake of upholding some claim for better conditions of labour. This spectacle, constant in its main features, though varying in minor details, has compelled even the thoughtless to ask himself its meaning. The idea of the great economic conflict underlying it has laid hold upon the public imagination as it never did before, and from every type of onlooker, clear-sighted or the reverse, criticisms and suggestions have poured in. And the clamorous alarm of one who only sees in the present phenomena the impending ruin of our civilisation, the patient reiterative advocacy by another of some trivial measure of reform which he regards as a sure panacea, and the triumphant doxology of a third, who believes that a new era of peace and prosperity will dawn with the emancipation of the workers — all find willing listeners, There is one thing that many people have found it difficult to understand — namely, how the vast machinery of production, creating the wealth which maintains the greatest empire the world has seen, should rest on so insecure a foundation that an almost inappreciable difference of opinion as to the rights or wrongs of a workman's dismissal, or of the engagement of workers within or without the gates of a dockyard, should be sufficient to lay idle whole mines, whole harbours, whole railway systems, whole groups of industries. The triviality of the apparent "casus belli " has astounded the casual observer. It is to help him to review the actual facts and to analyse their underlying causes, psychological and broadly human as well as economic and theoretical, that the writer will try to outline the results of his own observation, and to suggest some reforms which, in his opinion, will be of value in paving the way to industrial peace.
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The Way to Industrial Peace and the Problem of Unemployment
There is ample evidence that the nation has been deeply moved by the spectacle of thousands of men, in many parts of the country, and in many different industries, laying down their tools or suffering lockouts for the sake of upholding some claim for better conditions of labour. This spectacle, constant in its main features, though varying in minor details, has compelled even the thoughtless to ask himself its meaning. The idea of the great economic conflict underlying it has laid hold upon the public imagination as it never did before, and from every type of onlooker, clear-sighted or the reverse, criticisms and suggestions have poured in. And the clamorous alarm of one who only sees in the present phenomena the impending ruin of our civilisation, the patient reiterative advocacy by another of some trivial measure of reform which he regards as a sure panacea, and the triumphant doxology of a third, who believes that a new era of peace and prosperity will dawn with the emancipation of the workers — all find willing listeners, There is one thing that many people have found it difficult to understand — namely, how the vast machinery of production, creating the wealth which maintains the greatest empire the world has seen, should rest on so insecure a foundation that an almost inappreciable difference of opinion as to the rights or wrongs of a workman's dismissal, or of the engagement of workers within or without the gates of a dockyard, should be sufficient to lay idle whole mines, whole harbours, whole railway systems, whole groups of industries. The triviality of the apparent "casus belli " has astounded the casual observer. It is to help him to review the actual facts and to analyse their underlying causes, psychological and broadly human as well as economic and theoretical, that the writer will try to outline the results of his own observation, and to suggest some reforms which, in his opinion, will be of value in paving the way to industrial peace.
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The Way to Industrial Peace and the Problem of Unemployment
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The Way to Industrial Peace and the Problem of Unemployment
190Paperback
$7.99
7.99
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Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781663516558 |
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Publisher: | Dapper Moose Entertainment |
Publication date: | 06/12/2020 |
Pages: | 190 |
Product dimensions: | 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.44(d) |
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