Affichage de 96 résultats

description archivistique
Administrative files
GB 249 OH/2/7 · Section · 1920 - 1967
Fait partie de Scottish College of Commerce records

Correspondence; staff records 1920, 1952-1967; scholarships 1955-1961; amalgamation with Royal College of Science and Technology 1962-1965.

Sans titre
Biographical and corporate documentation
GB 249 OEDA/A · Section · 1976-2009
Fait partie de Occupational and Environmental Diseases Association (William Ashton Tait) Archives

Three series:

  • materials relating specifically to Nancy Tait and her charity
  • corporate records including SPAID trustee correspondence, OEDA management committee correspondence and minutes of meetings
  • assessments of the organisation, business plans and measures of improvement

The section closes with a file relating predominantly to SPAID / OEDA's status as a charity.

SPAID Trust Deed is at "Early correspondence with SPAID trustees" (OEDA/A/2/1/1). OEDA Memorandum & Articles of Association is at "Correspondence with L B Horam, 1988-1995" (OEDA/A/2/3), January 1994.

Providing information
GB 249 OEDA/C · Section · 1976-2007
Fait partie de Occupational and Environmental Diseases Association (William Ashton Tait) Archives

Six series, each of them representing a type of information service provided by SPAID / OEDA. As follows:

  • fielding occupational and environmental health enquiries
  • publications by the organisation
  • display boards and posters generated for use at meetings, conferences and around the office
  • responses to requests for information from solicitors
  • responses to requests for information from the media

The section concludes with a small series relating to compensation claims against the Johns-Manville Corporation / the Manville Personal Injury Settlement Trust.

Networking
GB 249 OEDA/F · Section · 1978-2007
Fait partie de Occupational and Environmental Diseases Association (William Ashton Tait) Archives

Networking was a core activity for Nancy Tait's organisation, and one she pursued through the so-called 'SPAID Fellowship' (imagined as a supporters' club), through an extensive series of conferences and meetings, and through information exchange and the development of professional contacts and alliances with a range of organisations and individuals, notably unions, victims support groups, and legal experts. Primarily these were based in the UK. But Tait also maintained a North American correspondence, in particular with personal injury lawyers and with asbestos critics, and she avidly followed news on European health & safety regulation.