Papers on banning asbestos in India.
Four episodes of 'Dangerous Lives' documentary series made by Yorkshire Television for Channel 4. Broadcast in 1989.
- episode about coal miners and health and safety
- 'The silent sufferers' about noise in the workplace
- 'Don't tell the workers' about cancer risks in the workplace
- episode about stress in the workplace
Letter to Dalton from Nick Wikeley, Professor of Law, University of Southampton enclosing the following academic papers on asbestos:
- Peter Bartrip, ‘Too little too late? The Home Office and the Asbestos Industry Regulations, 1931’. Medical History, 1998, 42.
- Nick Wikeley, ‘The first common law claim for asbestosis: Kelly v. Turner & Newall Ltd (1950)’ Journal of Personal Injury Litigation, 1998, Issue 3/98.
- Nick Wikeley, ‘Turner & Newall: Early organizational responses to litigation risk’. Journal of Law and Society, 1997, Vol 24, No 2.
Papers on removal of social security benefits from asbestos-related disease sufferers awarded compensation. Includes:
- report by Clydeside Action on Asbestos, 1994
- fourth report of House of Commons Social Security Committee on compensation recovery, 1995
Correspondence and papers on noise induced hearing loss in commercial vehicle drivers. Includes transcript of World in Action programme ‘Long Distance Lorry Drivers’.
Claim for damages by widow of man who died from mesothelioma.
Articles, letters to the press and a book review, written by Dalton. Plus one review of a work by Dalton.
The letter was written in response to ‘Asbestos Revisited’ by Alleman and Mossman in Scientific American, July 1997. Article included. Also included is letter from Joseph LaDou to Scientific American on the same article.
Documentary following the lives of tenants living on the Kingswood Estate in Hackney, East London. This episode is about a tenant who alerts other tenants on the estate to the dangers of living with asbestos in the flats.