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Thursday 13 April 2023 11.00 - 13.00
S-6 LAB29 The Travels of Labour Law
Victoriagatan 13, A252
Network: Labour Chair: Linda Clarke
Organizers: - Discussant: Jule Ehms
Malin Arvidsson : Speaking Up in Public to Win Women’s Votes: the 1921 Election Campaign of the Social Democratic Women’s Federation
Taking the 1919/1921 constitutional reform as a starting point, this paper examines how social democratic women used the enactment of universal suffrage as an argument to gain support for a Social Democratic Women’s Federation, funded in 1920 and replacing a looser network of local organizations. The paper also provides an ... (Show more)
Taking the 1919/1921 constitutional reform as a starting point, this paper examines how social democratic women used the enactment of universal suffrage as an argument to gain support for a Social Democratic Women’s Federation, funded in 1920 and replacing a looser network of local organizations. The paper also provides an analysis of to what extent the Federation used direct (personal) and indirect (media) channels for voter communication, and how potential female voters were addressed in written campaign material.

Drawing on previous studies pointing out that both scarce economic resources and a lack of time for political work among its members were challenges for the social democratic women’s movement, this study shows that indirect channels were used in the run-up to the local elections in March 1919 due to a lack of both funding and available speakers. During 1920, speaking tours were however arranged in cooperation with local and regional organizations within the Social Democratic Labour Party. Contributions from the party and the Trade Union Confederation made it possible to organize more tours in the spring of 1921.

Female speakers became sought-after, since they were seen as particularly apt at addressing female voters. In order to illustrate this, the extensive travels of Nelly Thüring (1875–1972), a photographer based in Gothenburg who eventually became one of the first female MP:s, are examined in-depth. During the year preceding the parliamentary elections in September 1921 she held over 300 meetings. In a pamphlet published by the Federation, Thüring addressed women in general, emphasizing their new societal responsibilities in the democratic era. The four flyers published by the Federation closer to the election rather address particular categories of women – mainly self-providing, unionized women or women as mothers. Epithets emphasizing a working class identity were also commonly used, in parallel with broader categorizations that can be linked to attempts to enlarge the party’s election base.

The paper contributes with new knowledge about the active participation of female speakers and organizers in Swedish election campaigns. Building on previous studies about the Social Democratic Labour Party’s attitude towards women’s separate organizing, the paper highlights how fears of losing the election because of a low turnout among women created room for maneuver – and at the same time produced recurrent remarks that women’s right to vote also meant a duty to vote. (Show less)

Suramya Thekke Kalathil : The Factories Act and Determination of Working Hours in the Madras Presidency, 1881-1947
The enactment of the Factories Act of 1881 marked a turning point in the history of labour rights in India as the focus of labour laws, for the first time, shifted towards the improvement of labour conditions. It became the first attempt of the state to regulate the working hours ... (Show more)
The enactment of the Factories Act of 1881 marked a turning point in the history of labour rights in India as the focus of labour laws, for the first time, shifted towards the improvement of labour conditions. It became the first attempt of the state to regulate the working hours across various categories of workers. A key feature of this legislation was that women and children emerged as two important categories to be protected.
The Indian Factories Act was enacted owing to external pressure which came from the British textile interests centered around Lancashire and Manchester. In Britain, the opportunity to extract maximum working hours from the labourers were limited in 1833 with the enactment of the first British Factories Act. Inorder to overcome this disadvantage, the British capital forced the Indian administration to enact a similar act in India. This was to eliminate the advantage of cheap labour that Indian capital had favourably utilised in the trade competition. Thus, the British reforms in India largely reflected the aspirations and interests of the capitalist class in Britain.
Under the current study, I have investigated the role of the Factories Acts in regulating the working hours in the factories of the erstwhile Madras Presidency under British rule. A detailed analysis of the various Factories Acts, rules and amendments introduced in the Presidency from 1881 to 1947 and their enforcement is carried out to understand the history of fixation of working hours and its actual implication on the ground.
This paper is largely based on macro data sourced from published primary materials such as the Madras Factories Acts (including the rules and the amendments), Administrative Reports of the Madras Presidency, Reports of the Department of Industries, Report of the Working of Factories Act in the Presidency, Report on Madras Labour, Labour Investigation Committee Reports etc. along with other relevant books and previous studies on this topic. This is a working paper and I intent to develop this paper with more micro and macro data. (Show less)



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