Difference between revisions of "Economic League"
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The League was closed down in the 1990s and a successor body, called [[Caprim]] set up. | The League was closed down in the 1990s and a successor body, called [[Caprim]] set up. | ||
==People== | ==People== | ||
− | === | + | ===Founders/Early days=== |
+ | [[Reginald Hall]] | ||
===1940s-1960s=== | ===1940s-1960s=== | ||
[[Lord Fraser of Allander]] | | [[Lord Fraser of Allander]] | |
Revision as of 19:46, 6 March 2009
An organisation set up in 1919 under the name National Propaganda. Its name was changed to the Economic League in 1924. Its main early functions were corporate propaganda and spying on the left. From about the 1950s its main role became blacklisting workers regarded as being 'subversives' in some way.
The League was closed down in the 1990s and a successor body, called Caprim set up.
Contents
People
Founders/Early days
1940s-1960s
!970s-1990s
Stan Hardy | Ian Kerr | Jack Winder |Sir Henry Saxon Tate of Tate & Lyle |
Resources
Publications on the Economic League
- Labour Research Department What is the Economic League? Labour White Papers No. 23, Labour Research Department, London, 1927.
- Labour Research Department What is the Economic League? Revised Edition, Foreword by Ebby Edwards, Secretary, Mineworkers Federation of Great Britain, Labour Research Department, London, 1937.
- Labour Research Department Who is Behind Them?, May 1953.
- Labour Research Department A Subversive Guide to the Economic League 1969.
- Mike Hughes Spies at Work, Printed version ISBN 0948995053, 1 IN 12 PUBLICATIONS, 1994.
Economic League publications
- Economic League, Subversion in Industry, Economic League (London and South Eastern Region), February 1958
- Economic League, The Agitators: Who the are. How they work. What they want. Service To Industry Series, Booklet No. 3, London: Economic League Central Council, No date. Most propably published in the latter half of 1974.