Dr Stephanie Ward
‘“The Workers Are in the Mood to Fight the Act”: Protest Against the Means Test 1932-5’, in Matt Perry and Matthias Reiss (eds), Unemployment and Protest: New Perspectives on Two Centuries of Contention (Oxford University Press, 2011).
‘The Means Test and the Unemployed in South Wales and the North-East of England, 1931-39’, Labour History Review, No. 1, Vol. 73 (April, 2008), pp. 113-32.
http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/maney/lhr/2008/00000073/00000001/art00006
For the Report Back section of History Workshop Journal: ‘The Life and Work of Menna Gallie, Llafur Welsh People’s History Society, Ystradgynlais, 6 May 2006’, History Workshop Journal, Vol. 63, No. 1 (2007), pp. 369-71.
http://hwj.oxfordjournals.org/content/63/1/369.extract
‘“Sit Down to Starve or Stand Up to Live”: Community, Protest and the Means Test in the Rhondda Valleys, 1931-1939’, Llafur: The Welsh People’s History Journal, Vol. 9, No. 2 (2005), pp. 27-44.
Unemployment and the State in the Depression: The Means Test and Protest in 1930s Britain (Monograph, in preparation).
Abstract - Unemployment and the State in the Depression makes an important and original contribution to our understanding of the 1930s in Britain, a period that continues to intrigue historians and capture the public imagination. The book focuses upon the impact of the coalition National Government’s unemployment policy, and on the use of a highly controversial household means test for the long-term unemployed in particular. If the depression of the 1930s cast its shadow over the history of interwar Britain, then it was the use of the means test that dominated public and private debates about it. It was the most debated piece of domestic legislation and opposition to the measure came from across the political spectrum; it led to a scale of opposition in the streets that some argued had not been seen since the days of Chartism. Such was its legacy, the alleged worst effects of the means test even influenced post-Second World War politics. Whilst no serious study of the depression would fail to mention the significance of the measure, to date, there is no single detailed study of the administration, effects and response to the means test. The purpose of this book is to redress this balance and further understandings of a measure which was central to the social and political history of Britain in this era. The book examines the construction of the image of the means test and its effects, including claims of suicide, furthering understanding of relationships within the family, the masculinity of the unemployed and how the out of work were perceived by the press and government. It focuses in particular upon protest movements, furthering understandings of the importance of place and political culture through a comparative case study of south Wales and the north-east of England.
