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Published: 1945
Total Pages: 228
ISBN-13:
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Author: Steven P. Dandaneau
Publisher: SUNY Press
Published: 1996-01-01
Total Pages: 294
ISBN-13: 9780791428771
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA cultural study of the Flint community's response to its own deindustrialization, within the framework of the state, national, and international forces that produced it.
Author: Shelton Stromquist
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Published: 2008
Total Pages: 322
ISBN-13: 0252074696
DOWNLOAD EBOOKHow the Cold War affected local-level union politics
Author: Martin Halpern
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Published: 1988-10-11
Total Pages: 374
ISBN-13: 1438405588
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis is the first book-length study of the triumph of the Reuther caucus over the Thomas-Addes-Leonard coalition in the United Auto Workers union. The dramatic defeat of the left-center coalition had far reaching significance. It helped to determine the shape of postwar labor relations, the direction of postwar liberalism, and the fate of the left. Based on manuscript sources, oral histories, and quantitative analyses of convention roll calls, UAW Politics in the Cold War Era places this union conflict in a national political context of postwar economic conflicts, the cold war, and the passage of the Taft-Hartley Act. Halpern offers a fresh point of view on the character of the two contending coalitions and the reasons for the Reuther triumph. His work is a valuable contribution to the current reassessment of the domestic politics of the early cold war years.
Author: Gregory Wood
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Published: 2016-10-14
Total Pages: 257
ISBN-13: 150170687X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn Clearing the Air, Gregory Wood examines smoking's importance to the social and cultural history of working people in the twentieth-century United States. Now that most workplaces in the United States are smoke-free, it may be difficult to imagine the influence that nicotine addiction once had on the politics of worker resistance, workplace management, occupational health, vice, moral reform, grassroots activism, and the labor movement. The experiences, social relations, demands, and disputes that accompanied smoking in the workplace in turn shaped the histories of antismoking politics and tobacco control.The steady expansion of cigarette smoking among men, women, and children during the first half of the twentieth century brought working people into sustained conflict with managers’ demands for diligent attention to labor processes and work rules. Addiction to nicotine led smokers to resist and challenge policies that coldly stood between them and the cigarettes they craved. Wood argues that workers’ varying abilities to smoke on the job stemmed from the success or failure of sustained opposition to employer policies that restricted or banned smoking. During World War II, workers in defense industries, for example, struck against workplace smoking bans. By the 1970s, opponents of smoking in workplaces began to organize, and changing medical knowledge and dwindling union power contributed further to the downfall of workplace smoking. The demise of the ability to smoke on the job over the past four decades serves as an important indicator of how the power of workers’ influence in labor-management relations has dwindled over the same period.
Author: United States. Dept. of Labor. Library
Publisher:
Published: 1950
Total Pages: 78
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Thomas Frank Adams
Publisher:
Published: 2010
Total Pages: 662
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: United States. National Labor Relations Board
Publisher:
Published: 1982
Total Pages:
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DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: United States. Department of Labor. Library
Publisher:
Published: 1945
Total Pages: 54
ISBN-13:
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