1st Edition
Corporate Policing, Yellow Unionism, and Strikebreaking, 1890-1930 In Defence of Freedom
Preface. Coercion at Work, Violence in Politics: What Changed Between 1890 and 1930?
Geoff Eley
1. Introduction. Strikebreaking and Industrial Vigilantism as an Historical Problem
Matteo Millan and Alessandro Saluppo
Part 1: Institutional Responses
2. Policies and Practices against Labour Movement in the Late Russian Empire
Volodymyr Kulikov and Irina Shilnikova
3. Violence Against Strikers in the Rural Peripheries of the Iberian Peninsula, 1890s-1915
Assumpta Castillo Cañiz
4. The Swedish Labour Market c. 1870–1914: A Labour Market Regime without Repression?
Erik Bengtsson
5. State Authorities, Municipal Forces, and Military Intervention in the Policing of Strikes in Austria-Hungary, 1890s-1914
Claire Morelon
6. Employers of the World, Unite! The Transnational Mobilization of Industrialists Around World War One
Pierre Eichenberger
Part 2: Strikebreaking Tactics and Practices
7. Anti-labour Repression in the in-between Spaces of Empire: The Compagnie des Messageries maritimes and the Steamship Workers of the ‘China Line’ (1900-1920)
Charles Fawell
8. In the Name of Constitutionalism and Islam: The Murky World of Labour Politics in Calcutta’s Docklands
Prerna Agarwal
9. Cairo, Athens, Salonica. Strikebreaking and Anti-Labour Practices of Employers and the State in the Early-Twentieth-Century Cigarette Industry
Thanasis Betas
10. In Reaction to Revolution: Anti-Strike Mentalities and Practices in the Russian Radical Right, 1905-14
George Gilbert
11. “We Can Kill Striking Workers without Being Prosecuted.” Armed Bands of Strikebreakers in late Imperial Germany
Amerigo Caruso
Part 3: Civic and Industrial Vigilantism
12. The Wild West of Employer Anti-Unionism: The Glorification of Vigilantism and Individualism in the Early-Twentieth-Century United States
Vilja Hulden and Chad Pearson
13. Vigilant Citizens: the Case of the Volunteer Police Force, 1911-1914
Alessandro Saluppo
14. From “State Protection” to “Private Defence”. Strikebreaking, Civilian Armed Mobilisation and the Rise of Italian Fascism
Matteo Millan
15. Conclusions. Strikebreaking and the Fault-Lines of Mass Society, 1880-1930
Martin Conway
Biography
Matteo Millan is Associate Professor of Modern and Contemporary History at the University of Padova, Italy. He worked as a postdoctoral researcher in Oxford and Dublin. In 2015, he obtained a major grant from the European Research Council. He has published extensively on Italian fascism and pre-1914 armed associations.
Alessandro Saluppo is an ERC post-doctoral researcher at the University of Padua, Italy. His current research is devoted to private industrial policing, strikebreaking and anti-labor violence in the United Kingdom before the First World War.






