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Black Market Britain: 1939-1955

Autor Mark Roodhouse
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 20 mar 2013
Britain's underground economy flourished during the 1940s and early 1950s thanks to rationing and price control, producers, traders, and professional criminals helped consumers to get a little extra on the side, from under the counter, or off the back of a lorry. Yet widespread evasion of regulations designed to ensure fair shares for all did not undermine the austerity policies that characterised these years and its vital role in securing compliance with economic regulation. In Black Market Britain, Mark Roodhouse argues that Britons showed self-restraint in their illegal dealings. The means, motives, and opportunities for evasion were not lacking. The shortages were real, regulations were not watertight, and enforcement was haphazard. Fairness, not patriotism and respect for the law, is the key to understanding this self-restraint. By invoking popular notions of a fair price, a fair profit, and a fair share, government rhetoric limited black marketeering as would-be evaders had to justify their offences both to themselves and others.Black Market Britain underlines the importance of fairness to those seeking a richer understanding of economic life in modern Britain.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780199588459
ISBN-10: 0199588457
Pagini: 290
Ilustrații: Four black and white images, numerous graphs and tables
Dimensiuni: 162 x 241 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.58 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Recenzii

fascinating account
One often reads that a book is an important contribution to the social, cultural, political, and economic history of mid-twentieth-century Britain, but this one really is.
...a skilful synthesis of economic, social, and cultural analyses. This is the real strength of Roodhouses writing. He moves deftly between these different perspectives to draw a rich and nuanced picture of moral and economic life in mid-twentieth-century Britain.
Mark Roodhouse's book is also attractive to an interdisciplinary audience, deserving attention from criminologists, historians and economists. Roodhouse's book ... raises pertinent questions about perceptions of the fair society in times of austerity.
Mark Roodhouse has provided a comprehensive and thoroughly researched study of the functioning of black and grey markets in wartime and post-war Britain [and] identified the importance of ethics and concepts of fair play in the success of rationing schemes.
This book admirably combines forensic examination of obscure sources with sophisticated argument to present a thorough and persuasive account of economic activity deemed illegal by Britains wartime and post-war rationing and controls.
It should be essential reading for scholars and students interested in the home front during the Second World War and 1940s Britain generally.
[a] meticulously researched book - indeed, the author should be congratulated for the depth and scale of his archival investigation.
Mark Roodhouse's Black Market Britain draws on a range of hitherto under exploited sources to build up a vivid and convincing picture of the way in which citizens came to terms with war-time rationing and price controls. ...a richly textured analysis
...punctuated with fascinating new detail. Prodigiously researched and full of subtle and balanced argument, his book draws economic and cultural history closer together; it is a major contribution to our understanding of British society in the mid twentieth century.
This book is a bold and original fusion of economic, legal, political, social and cultural approaches. Meticulously researched and engagingly written, it is a hugely impressive debut which will unquestionably set the agenda for all future research on this topic.
With this work, Mark Roodhouse has provided a comprehensive and thoroughly researched study of the functioning of black and grey markets in wartime and post-war Britain ... This work is a significant contribution to both economic history and the cultural history of the British in the Second World War.
an excellent snapshot of British society at all levels, and of how these levels interacted with each other legally and illegally. The engaging and informative style and interesting examples make it a work suitable for undergraduate and postgraduate courses, and ensure it will be consulted for years to come.

Notă biografică

Mark Roodhouse is a Lecturer in History at the University of York. His research focuses on the economic and social history of modern Britain.