New releases from Joe Wilkes, Honey and the Bear, and Hannah James and Toby Kuhn
Changing Derbyshire NUM
by Malcolm Ball
(Leen Editions, £N/A)
IN 1944, British miners took the huge step of moving from being part of the federal structure of the Miners Federation of Great Britain. They became part of a national union, the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), and this meant that the Derbyshire Miners Association became the Derbyshire Area of the NUM.
Derbyshire had always been seen as a moderate area, likely to side with the other right-wing regions which made up a clear majority on the union’s ruling body. But by the general election of 1970, alongside areas such as Scotland, Wales and Kent, it had clearly moved to the left and Malcolm Ball's book discusses the national and regional circumstances which brought this political change about.
A past confrontation permanently shaped the methods the state will use to protect employers against any claims by their employees, writes MATT WRACK, but unions are readying to face the challenge
Four decades on, the Wapping dispute stands as both a heroic act of resistance and a decisive moment in the long campaign to break trade union power. Lord JOHN HENDY KC looks back on the events of 1986
In part II of a serialisation of his new book, JOHN McINALLY explores how witch-hunting drives took hold in the Civil Service as the cold war emerged in the wake of WWII


