1st Edition
The Origins of Worker Mobilisation Australia 1788-1850
1. Reconsidering the Collective Impulse and the Colonial Context
2. Law, the Courts and Inequality at Work
3. Overview of Worker Organisation, 1788-1850
4. Analysing the Components of Organisation
5. Organisation in Transport and Maritime Activities
6. Organisation in the Rural and Extractives Sectors
7. Organisation in Construction and Building Materials
8. Organisation in Manufacturing and Related Trades
9. Organisation in Government and Community Services
10. Organisation in Commercial, Personal Services and Retailing
11. Peak and Political Organisation
12. Re-evaluating Worker Mobilisation
Biography
Michael Quinlan is professor of industrial relations in the School of Management at the University of New South Wales, Australia. He is also an adjunct professor in the School of History and Classics at the University of Tasmania and a visiting professor at the Business School, Middlesex University in London. Born in Sydney he divides his time between this city and Launceston, Tasmania where much of this book was written.
"This is a truly path-breaking study of the collective impulse among workers, with important pointers for the global historiography of labour."
Terry Irving, University of Wollongong, Australia
"Quinlan sees much in common with today’s world of work and the period he examines. He writes with the radical certainty that those who are oppressed can only redress their grievances by making those who rule uneasy, with even the smallest actions contributing to this unease. All of which, collectively and eventually, makes a difference. Overall, Quinlan’s book is testament to the possibilities and persistence of dissent and rebellion despite draconian and oppressive hegemonies that would have it otherwise – yesterday, today, and tomorrow."
Rowan Cahill, Labour History Melbourne
In its own terms, Quinlan’s book is a major achievement, not least because it has the
capacity to propel the history of class structures here and overseas in new directions.
Moreover, it is timely, as he points out, to consider this history in a period when precarious
labour and informal methods of struggle return, as the global working class’ reality,
in the neo-liberal era.Terry Irving, University of Wollongong, Australia
"Its major contribution will remain the depth of its inquiry into a period when unfree and free labour underpinned economic growth, in often extremely harsh working conditions, but tempered by the challenges that workers, individually and collectively, threw up to them"
Mark Finnane Griffith University
This is a remarkable, and remarkably useful, book. It is the outcome of an exhaustive project – over 30 years of excavating the history of workers’ struggles, exactly the kind of work that the neoliberal university has no time for. From those decades of systematic and comprehensive trawling through the colonial press and an eno






