At the end of 1984, the Certification Officer listed 365 trade unions in Britain with a total membership of 10,753,993. Eighty‐nine of these organisations were affiliated to the Trades Union Congress (TUC) whose total membership at that time was 10,082,144 (p. 47), (p. 1). There are no up‐to‐date figures providing the numbers of full‐time officers and lay officials of TUC unions currently. But an estimate by the TUC in 1973/74 suggested that there were about 2,800 full‐time officers in affiliated unions at that time. There were also 400,000 voluntary officers in union branches or at their places of work, with an annual turnover of 20 per cent (p. 2). Given that TUC affiliated membership was just over 10 million at 31 December 1973, it can reasonably be assumed that there are similar numbers of full‐time officers and voluntary office holders today. The potential education and training needs of these 3,000 paid officials, but especially of the 300,000 work‐place representatives and 100,000 branch officials, as well as those of millions of trade union members generally, are very large indeed. And, given the limited resources available to satisfy them, they can only be marginally addressed by the trade union movement.
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1 March 1987
This article was originally published in
Journal of European Industrial Training
Review Article|
March 01 1987
Training Trade Unionists in Britain
David Farnham
David Farnham
Principal Lecturer in Industrial Relations, The Business School, Portsmouth Polytechnic
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7425
Print ISSN: 0309-0590
© MCB UP Limited
1987
Journal of European Industrial Training (1987) 11 (3): 5–12.
Citation
Farnham D (1987), "Training Trade Unionists in Britain". Journal of European Industrial Training, Vol. 11 No. 3 pp. 5–12, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb002221
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