2019
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Tri Tran, « The Invergordon “Mutiny” 1931 and the Admiralty », Presses universitaires de Franche-Comté
Introduction: a mutiny with no court martial Protest movements in the Royal Navy are rarely cited as cases of industrial protest in the history of the British labour movement. First because expression of protest in armed forces is legally called “mutiny” and as such was rare and harshly repressed: in the early days of sailing navies, resistance to or refusal of orders given by senior officers was invariably punished by hanging at a section of the main mast. When an entire ship’s company was involved,...