
Martin Gorsky
et al.
Published online:
19 July 2012
Published in print:
30 July 2006
Online ISBN:
9781781701423
Print ISBN:
9780719065781
Contents
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Representative structures Representative structures
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Multi-hospital schemes Multi-hospital schemes
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Single-hospital schemes Single-hospital schemes
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Activism Activism
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Attendance Attendance
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The nature of scheme leadership The nature of scheme leadership
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Continuity of leadership Continuity of leadership
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The ethos of the contributory schemes The ethos of the contributory schemes
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Charity or insurance? Charity or insurance?
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Relations with the labour movement Relations with the labour movement
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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Chapter
5 Hospital contribution and civil society: humanity not democracy?
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Published:July 2006
Cite
Gorsky, Martin, John Mohan, and Tim Willis, 'Hospital contribution and civil society: humanity not democracy?', Mutualism and Health Care: Hospital Contributory Schemes in Twentieth-century Britain (Manchester , 2006; online edn, Manchester Scholarship Online, 19 July 2012), https://doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9780719065781.003.0005, accessed 15 May 2025.
Abstract
This chapter investigates the role of hospital contributory schemes as mediators of popular participation in health provision in Great Britain. It presents empirical evidence on the scope for grassroots or local involvement in decision-making and explores the structures and procedures of representation. It examines how active contributors were in the movement, in terms both of attendances in democratic forums and of the nature of the leadership which the movement selected to represent it. The analysis reveals that contributory schemes took their role as bastions of worker democracy very seriously.
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