Church of Scotland Industrial Mission Project Interviews
The main interest of this research is to gain an understanding of the dynamics and changing nature of the Church’s industrial mission. It combines an extensive assessment of a broad range of written sources – including the papers of the Home Mission Board from 1940-79; Reports to the General Assembly; Reports of the Home Board (Church and Industry); Church and Nation Committee; Youth Committee and the Commission on Communism – with the interviewing of Industrial Chaplains, together with employers and workers who had experience of the industrial mission. The respondents provide commentary on the changing nature of Scottish industrial society, as secularisation and deindustrialisation in this period dramatically altered long-term norms and values. Interviews touch upon the depth of sectarianism in the Scottish workplace, the volatility of industrial relations, alcoholism, and the problem of industrial closures and the issue of redundancies. To gain an understanding of the dynamics and changing nature of the Church’s industrial mission, this research combines an extensive assessment of a broad range of written sources – including the papers of the Home Mission Board from 1940-79; Reports to the General Assembly; Reports of the Home Board (Church and Industry); Church and Nation Committee; Youth Committee and the Commission on Communism – with the interviewing of several Industrial Chaplains, together with employers and workers who had experience of the industrial mission.
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Geographic Coverage:
West of Scotland (Clydeside) - including Glasgow, Greennock, Port Glasgow North Sea Oil instalations
Temporal Coverage:
2007-08-01/2008-09-30
Resource Type:
dataset
Available in Data Catalogs:
UK Data Service