A comparative study of class relationships and institutional orders in Birmingham and Sheffield between 1830 and 1895 with particular reference to the spheres of education, industry and politics
Birmingham and Sheffield had strategic significance — demographically, politically and technologically — in English society during this period. Although their local industries had many similarities, particularly before 1850, structures of social differentiation and integration differed greatly betwe...
Main Author: | Smith, Dennis |
---|---|
Published: |
University of Leicester
1980
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.289936 |
Similar Items
-
A sociological study of the economic roles of children, with particular reference to Birmingham and Cambridgeshire
by: Morrow, Virginia
Published: (1992) -
Democracy and community action in the east end of Sheffield
by: McColl, Claire Audris
Published: (1998) -
A commercial and industrial elite : A study of Birmingham's upper middle class 1780-1914
by: Ballard, P. D.
Published: (1983) -
Making mixed race : time, place and identities in Birmingham
by: Campion, Karis
Published: (2017) -
Crime and the structure of social relations within a British city : A geographical critique with reference to north central Birmingham
by: Smith, Susan
Published: (1982)