Dave Lyddon, Greg J. Bamber
Peter Carr (1930–2017) was an important, albeit ‘behind-the-scenes’, member of the British industrial relations policy and practice community of the 1960s and 1970s. He was at the centre of major events and an influential friend and colleague to many of the key figures of that period. This foreword to the interview by Greg Bamber explores his contribution with more nuance and context than in the interview, using his published memoirs and other sources. He was a pioneer, when a college lecturer, in early shop-steward training, then, after a part-time role from 1967 at the National Board for Prices and Incomes, he took a leading role in the Commission for Industrial Relations (1969–74) and at its successor, the Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service (ACAS). He worked at ACAS until his appointment, in late 1978, as Labour Attaché at the British Embassy in Washington. This foreword explores the range of his responsibilities and contributions in his different capacities during the 1960s and 1970s when the British state prized industrial relations expertise. He had remarkable success in navigating the upper echelons of the UK civil service, especially a ‘class ceiling’ that relatively few people from working-class backgrounds break though. If Carr had been born into a working-class family in an earlier or a later generation, would he have had such a successful career?