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20 Facts About Allan Flanders

1.

Allan Flanders was a British academic, author, and founding member of the Oxford School of Industrial Relations, along with Hugh Clegg, Alan Fox, Lord William McCarthy, Sir George Bain and Otto Kahn-Freund.

2.

From 1929 to 1933, Allan Flanders attended the ISK cadre school in Kassel where he learned to speak German and wrote for the organization.

3.

Allan Flanders worked as a travelling salesman until the Second World War when he found work as a draughtsman, which he did throughout the war, working in a factory.

4.

From 1943, Allan Flanders began working for the Trades Union Congress and Allied Control Commission for Germany, moving back to Germany from 1946 to 1948.

5.

In 1949, after returning from the US, Allan Flanders was offered a Senior Lecturer position at Oxford University in the field of industrial relations.

6.

At Oxford, Allan Flanders met and worked with Hugh Clegg, considered another founding member of the Oxford School of Industrial Relations with whom he wrote and worked throughout his career.

7.

Allan Flanders remained at Nuffield until 1969, when he took a position as a commissioner for the Commission on Industrial Relations.

8.

In 1969, Allan Flanders was given the title of visiting professor in industrial relations at Manchester University.

9.

Allan Flanders left the CIR citing ill health after contracting a debilitating disease which left him reliant on a wheelchair.

10.

Allan Flanders supplied copious amounts of articles for particularly the Vanguard or Socialist Vanguard, writing a total of thirty-six from 1934 to 1939.

11.

Allan Flanders spent a considerable amount of time debating about the payment of war and the reconstruction after the war.

12.

Allan Flanders's views regarding inequality among different classes only grew stronger as he progressed in his work during the 1940s.

13.

Allan Flanders became more and more influential in British industrial relations until his death.

14.

In 1950, Allan Flanders chaired the Socialist Union to work more closely with social democrats within the Labour Party shortly after their election in 1945.

15.

In 1964, Allan Flanders wrote The Fawley Productivity Agreements, which follows the Esso Fawley Refinery's objective to increase productivity levels.

16.

Allan Flanders argues this is especially true of external regulation, which is key in ensuring proper employee-employer relations, but of trade unions.

17.

Allan Flanders continued to pursue and write on anti-Marxist, Leninist socialism for decades until the postwar 1940s when he worked for the UK government.

18.

However, Allan Flanders maintained links to issues around socialism including in work during his academic career as well as returning to co-edit the Socialist Vanguard and Socialist Commentary from 1971 to his death.

19.

However, Allan Flanders' thought and mainstream political support migrated to gaitskellism and support of the UK Labour party's gaitskellite faction led by Hugh Gaitskell, opposing some issues and positions of British trade unions surrounding nationalization of private industries.

20.

Allan Flanders held an anti-communist position and opposed state socialism and supported ideas surrounding ethical socialism and the work of elite revolutionaries.