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Robert Gray. The factory question and industrial England, 1830–1860. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge [etc.] 1996. xiv, 253 pp. Ill. £35.00; $59.95.
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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 February 2009
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- Copyright © Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis 1997
References
1 Eg. Hutchins, B. L. and Harrison, A., A History of Factory Legislation (London, 1911, 2nd ed.)Google Scholar; Ward, J. T., The Factory Movement, 1830–1855 (London, 1962)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Marvel, Howard, “Factory Regulation: A Reinterpretation of Early English Experience”, The Journal of Law and Economics, 20 (1979), pp. 379–402CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Bartrip, P. W. J., “State Intervention in Mid-Nineteenth Century Britain: Fact or Fiction?”, Journal of British Studies, 23 (1983), pp. 63–83CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Booth, Douglas E., “Karl Marx on the State Regulation of the Labor Process; The English Factory Acts”, Review of Social Economy, 36 (1978), pp. 137–158CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Harrison, Barbara and Mockett, Helen, “Women in the Factory: The State and Factory Legislation in Nineteenth-Century Britain”, in Jamieson, Lynn and Corr, Helen (eds), State. Private Life and Political Change (New York, 1990), pp. 137–162CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Valverde, Marianna, “‘Giving the Female a Domestic Turn’: The Social, Legal and Moral Regulation of Women's Work in British Cotton Mills, 1820–1850”, Journal of Social History, 21 (1988), pp. 619–634CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Lewis, Jane and Rose, Sonya O., “‘Let England Blush!’: State Protection of Women Workers in England, 1830–1914”, in Wikander, Ulla, Kessler-Harris, Alice and Lewis, Jane (eds). Protecting Women: Labor Legislation in Europe, the United States and Australia, 1880–1920 (Urbana, IL [etc.], 1995), pp. 29–62Google Scholar; Rose, Sonya O., Limited Livelihoods: Gender and Class in Nineteenth-Century England (Berkeley [etc.], 1992), ch. 3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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