Article
Details
Citation
Wright V (2018) ¡®¡®Tinkering at a local level¡¯: Unemployment, State intervention and community agency in Ferguslie Park, Paisley c. 1972-1977¡¯. Scottish Labour History, 53, pp. 192-211.
Abstract
In 1971 Ferguslie Park in Paisley was designated a beneficiary of the Labour government¡¯s 1969 Community Development Project (CDP). This initiative, one of the first of many interventions in ¡®deprived¡¯ communities in the UK after the ¡®rediscovery¡¯ of poverty in the 1960s, was motivated by attempts to solve the apparently intractable problems of high unemployment, material want and poor housing conditions through an ethos of ¡®self-help¡¯. The emphasis was on local solutions led by the residents. This article considers how residents attempted to overcome the ¡®marginalisation¡¯ of their community through the establishment of a co-operative workshop with the aim of addressing the high level of unemployment prevalent in Ferguslie Park. This local initiative highlights the main tension apparent in the CDP as a whole: the need for structural change at a national level, including a radical rethinking of policy objectives, especially in relation to the post-1945 state commitment to full employment, as opposed to ¡®tinkering at a local level¡¯ and making individuals and communities responsible for creating their own employment in small scale local projects.
Journal
Scottish Labour History: Volume 53
Status | Published |
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Funders | |
Publication date | 01/11/2018 |
Date accepted by journal | 01/08/2018 |
ISSN | 1472-6041 |
People (1)
Research Fellow, Dementia and Ageing