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Intergenerational learning and place-making in a deindustrialized locality: “Tracks of the Past” in Lanarkshire, Scotland

dc.contributor.authorGibbs, Ewanen
dc.contributor.authorHenderson, Susanen
dc.contributor.authorBianchi, Victoriaen
dc.date.accessioned2022-06-06T08:42:58Z
dc.date.available2022-06-06T08:42:58Z
dc.date.issued2022-05-19
dc.descriptionPreviously deposited in Glasgow University repository on 20 May 2022 at: https://eprints.gla.ac.uk/271365/
dc.description.abstractThis paper contributes to scholarship on the long experience of deindustrialization. It emphasizes contemporary place-making in navigating the much-changed socioeconomic landscapes that the closure of mills, mines, shipyards and factories have left behind. The ‘half-life of deindustrialization' suggests these experiences have been received through understandings of labour and community with origins in the industrial era. ‘Tracks of the Past' was a school-based education project themed around workers' occupation of Caterpillar's earth-moving machinery plant in Lanarkshire, Scotland. The occupation was a response to Caterpillar's shock closure announcement and the loss of 1,200 jobs. It lasted 103 days between January and April 1987 when closure was reluctantly conceded. A Caterpillar Workers Legacy Group (CWLG) commemorated the occupation's thirtieth anniversary. During 2018, academics collaborated with the CWLG to develop a curriculum for a local high school class. ‘Tracks' produced lessons where students engaged with archival sources and physical objects, interviewed members of the CWLG and conducted online research. The ‘learning journey' montages that the students produced combined conversations in 2018 with sources from three decades earlier, often reflecting on the occupation as a historical episode in a highly localised context. Others implicated the closure within an international pattern, linking Caterpillar’s divestment to the actions of multinationals in the contemporary global economy. In neither case did the invocation of the occupation lead to a straightforward translation of the occupation into contemporary workplace justice issues as the CWLG had hoped. However, these results did suggest a creative deployment of the past that rationalised the occupation with reference to contemporary deindustrialized contexts. These findings demonstrate the utility of the half-life through a lingering industrial past, but also demonstrate the need to conceptualise agents or custodians of labour history and challenge the linearity of passing time that an incrementally receding industrial era implicates.en
dc.description.ispublishedinpress
dc.description.statusinpress
dc.description.urihttps://doi.org/10.1017/S0147547922000011en
dc.identifier.citationGibbs, E., Henderson, S. and Bianchi, V. (2022) ‘Intergenerational learning and place-making in a deindustrialized locality: “tracks of the past” in Lanarkshire, Scotland’, International Labor and Working-Class History, 102, pp. 157–180. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0147547922000011.en
dc.identifier.issn0147-5479en
dc.identifier.issn1471-6445
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1017/S0147547922000011
dc.identifier.urihttps://eresearch.qmu.ac.uk/handle/20.500.12289/12292
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherCambridge University Pressen
dc.relation.ispartofInternational Labor and Working-Class Historyen
dc.titleIntergenerational learning and place-making in a deindustrialized locality: “Tracks of the Past” in Lanarkshire, Scotlanden
dc.typeArticleen
dcterms.accessRightspublic
qmu.authorBianchi, Victoriaen
qmu.centreCentre for Culture in Societyen
refterms.accessExceptionNAen
refterms.dateAccepted2020-06
refterms.dateDeposit2022-06-06
refterms.dateFCD2022-06-06
refterms.depositExceptionNAen
refterms.panelUnspecifieden
refterms.technicalExceptionNAen
refterms.versionAMen
rioxxterms.publicationdate2022-05-19
rioxxterms.typeJournal Article/Reviewen

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