Special report by PEOPLE’S WORLD
“THERE’S no such thing as ‘only a housewife’.”
Shelia Capstick was speaking to at a small gathering of Yorkshire miners’ wives to launch a local Women Against Pit Closures (WAPC) group during the miners’ strike against pit closures of 1984-5.
She’d asked the women in the front room of her home to introduce themselves and say what they did.
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
Maggie Bowden was a trailblazing campaigning lawyer at Birnberg and Thompsons, women’s organiser of the Communist Party, and general secretary of Liberation
MOLLIE BROWN reports on this year’s festival in honour of the ‘seven men of Jarrow’ deported to Australia for union activity 193 years ago


