Since 2010, the small town of Wairoa on the East Coast of New Zealand has been at the centre of the most bitter and protracted industrial dispute in New Zealand’s recent history. The agri-business giant, Talley’s Group, took over the town’s meat plant in 2010 and commenced a campaign to ‘draw the line on union influence’.
Drawing on oral histories, this talk by Ross Webb focuses on the campaign by meat workers to save their union, the sacrifices involved, and the legacy of three successive lockouts on workers and the community.
Ross Webb is an historian with an interest in labour history. He is currently a PhD candidate at Victoria University, Wellington.
These monthly Public History Talks are a collaboration between the National Library of New Zealand https://natlib.govt.nz/ and the Ministry for Culture and Heritage https://mch.govt.nz/.
Recorded live at the National Library of New Zealand, 2 October 2019.
Patronage and Scientific Rationalism: The Public Service Act 1912
Charles Mackay: The fall and rise of New Zealand's first 'homosexual'
Life on the Battlefields 94 years later
Scandal sheet confidential: voyages around NZ Truth (1977-2008)
The search for Anne Perry
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Irish Songs with Ken Murray
History Obscura
Historycal: Words that Shaped the World
The Rest Is History
Everything Everywhere Daily