Association of Scientific Workers




































Association of Scientific Workers
Founded 1918
Date dissolved 1968
Merged into Association of Scientific, Technical and Managerial Staffs
Journal Association of Scientific Workers Journal
Affiliation
WFSW, ITUC
Office location 15 Half Moon Street, London
Country United Kingdom

The Association of Scientific Workers (AScW) was a trade union in the United Kingdom. It was founded as the National Union of Scientific Workers in 1918, changing its name to the Association of Scientific Workers in 1927.


The union largely represented laboratory and technical workers in universities, the National Health Service and in chemical and metal manufacturing. It was the union for scientists with a conscience,[dubious ] and could name half-a-dozen Nobel Prize winners amongst its membership. The former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Margaret Thatcher was also a member.


In 1969 AScW merged with the ASSET (Association of Supervisory Staff, Executives and Technicians) to form ASTMS (the Association of Scientific, Technical and Managerial Staffs)



General Secretaries



1918: Norman Campbell

1920: Archibald Church

1931:

1935: William Alfred Wooster

1945: Roy Innes

1949: Ted Ainley

1951: Ben Smith

1954: John Dutton



Literature


  • Roy MacLeod, Kay MacLeod: The Contradictions of Professionalism: Scientists, Trade Unionism and the First World War, in: Social Studies of Science, Vol. 9, No. 1, European Issue (Feb., 1979), pp. 1-32


External links



  • Catalogue of the AScW archives, held at the Modern Records Centre, University of Warwick












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