Article ID: CBB000770536

Coming Up for Air: Experts, Employers, and Workers in Campaigns to Compensate Silicosis Sufferers in Britain, 1918--1939 (2005)

unapi

Government regulation of dangerous trades and the compensation of those injured by their work remains a matter of considerable debate among medical historians. Trade unions have frequently been criticized for pursuing financial awards for their members rather than demanding improvements in health and safety at the workplace. This article examines the neglected subject of silicosis injuries in Britain from the time when the first legislation was passed for the compensation of those suffering from the harmful affects of silica dust in 1918 to the outbreak of war in 1939, when a major new study was under way which would transform the scientific understanding and the legal compensation of those who were diagnosed as being ill with pneumoconiosis. It is argued that in framing legislation for compensation, politicians and their civil servants sought to retain the legal framework created in 1897--1906 and developed a model of industrial insurance which depended to a large extent on a co-operative relationship with leading employers. Medical scientists identified silica as a uniquely hazardous agent in workers' lung disease, while emphasizing the specialist knowledge required for its diagnosis. One remarkable feature of the selective compensation schemes devised after 1918 was the reliance on geological rather than pathological evidence to prove compensation rights, as well as strict employment limits on those eligible to claim. Only the campaigning of labour organizations and persistent evidence of lung disease among anthracite coal miners led to a significant relaxation of compensation rules in 1934 and the fresh scientific investigation which transformed the medical understanding of respiratory illness among industrial workers.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB000770536/

Similar Citations

Book íguez-Ocaña, Esteban Rodr; (2002)
The Politics of the Healthy Life: An International Perspective (/isis/citation/CBB000831197/)

Article Menéndez Navarro, Alfredo; (2008)
The Politics of Silicosis in Interwar Spain: Republican and Francoist Approaches to Occupational Health (/isis/citation/CBB000931727/)

Article Martínez-Pérez, José; Porras Gallo, María Isabel; (2006)
Hacia una nueva percepción social de las personas con discapacidades: legislación, medicina y los inválidos del trabajo en España (1900-1936) (/isis/citation/CBB000771733/)

Article Steffan Blayney; (2019)
Industrial Fatigue and the Productive Body: the Science of Work in Britain, c. 1900–1918 (/isis/citation/CBB510751901/)

Book Michael Dwyer; (2018)
Strangling Angel: Diphtheria and Childhood Immunization in Ireland (/isis/citation/CBB799026134/)

Thesis Adams, David Lynn; (2008)
Putting Pandemics in Perspective: England and the Flu, 1889--1919 (/isis/citation/CBB001561272/)

Authors & Contributors
Melling, Joseph
Gilmintinov, Roman
Blayney, Steffan
Dwyer, Michael
Arnaud Page
Zweiniger-Bargielowska, Ina
Journals
Social History of Medicine
Twentieth-Century British History
Medical History
Dynamis: Acta Hispanica ad Medicinae Scientiarumque Historiam Illustrandam
Studia Historiae Scientiarum
Technology and Culture
Publishers
Rodopi
Liverpool University Press
European Association for the History of Medicine and Health Publications
University of Kansas
Concepts
Public health
Industrial medicine; occupational diseases
Medicine
Trade unions
Medicine and politics
Coal and coal mining
People
Winnicott, Donald Woods
Time Periods
20th century, early
19th century
20th century
Places
Great Britain
Spain
Wales
Weimar Republic (1919-1933)
United States
Germany
Institutions
National Health Service (Great Britain)
Rockefeller Foundation
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment