Book Description
A comprehensive account of the women who organized for labor rights and equality from the early factories to the 1970's.
Author : Philip S. Foner
Publisher :
Page : 623 pages
File Size : 44,58 MB
Release : 2018-08-07
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 9781608469215
A comprehensive account of the women who organized for labor rights and equality from the early factories to the 1970's.
Author : Robert Franklin Hoxie
Publisher :
Page : 476 pages
File Size : 39,21 MB
Release : 1917
Category : Labor unions
ISBN :
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 92 pages
File Size : 46,14 MB
Release : 2006
Category : Social surveys
ISBN :
Author : Fiona Colgan
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 429 pages
File Size : 33,68 MB
Release : 2003-09-02
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN : 1134582080
The pressures of globalization and diversity are increasingly requiring organizations to rethink their priorities and methods. In this collection, leading researchers examine the debates and developments on gender, diversity and democracy in trade unions in eleven countries. Offering an authoritative basis for comparative analysis, this book is essential reading for researchers, teachers, trade unionists and students of industrial relations and equal opportunities, along with all those concerned with ensuring that modern organizations reflect and represent the needs and concerns of a diverse workforce.
Author : Alice Henry
Publisher : IndyPublish.com
Page : 358 pages
File Size : 16,2 MB
Release : 1915
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN :
The book examines the history of women's labor organization and the relationship of working-class women to the campaign for woman suffrage.
Author : Nancy Schrom Dye
Publisher :
Page : 216 pages
File Size : 28,14 MB
Release : 1980
Category : Social Science
ISBN :
This book is the story of the New York Women's Trade Union League's efforts to reach New York City's working women and interest them in unionization, to create an alliance of upper-class and working-class women, and to synthesize unionism and feminism into a viable program for improving the lives of New York City's women wage earners. It is an attempt to delineate the cultural, ideological, and tactical difficulties the WTUL encountered in its efforts to organize the city's working women and its ultimate disillusionment with the strategy of integrating women into male-dominated unions. Finally, this work is concerned with the league's transformation from a self-defined labor organization that downplayed women's special concerns in the work force into a women's reform organization that emphasized specifically female demands, namely, woman suffrage and protective labor legislation.
Author : Michelle Haberland
Publisher : University of Georgia Press
Page : 240 pages
File Size : 10,45 MB
Release : 2015-03-01
Category : History
ISBN : 082034754X
Apparel manufacturing in the American South, by virtue of its size, its reliance upon female labor, and its broad geographic scope, is an important but often overlooked industry that connects the disparate concerns of women's history, southern cultural history, and labor history. In Striking Beauties, Michelle Haberland examines its essential features and the varied experiences of its workers during the industry's great expansion from the late 1930s through the demise of its southern branch at the end of the twentieth century. The popular conception of the early twentieth-century South as largely agrarian informs many histories of industry and labor in the United States. But as Haberland demonstrates, the apparel industry became a key part of the southern economy after the Great Depression and a major driver of southern industrialization. The gender and racial composition of the workforce, the growth of trade unions, technology, and capital investment were all powerful forces in apparel's migration south. Yet those same forces also revealed the tensions caused by racial and gender inequities not only in the region but in the nation at large. Striking Beauties places the struggles of working women for racial and economic justice in the larger context of southern history. The role of women as the primary consumers of the family placed them in a critical position to influence the success or failure of boycotts, union label programs and ultimately solidarity.
Author : Annelise Orleck
Publisher : Univ of North Carolina Press
Page : 400 pages
File Size : 20,30 MB
Release : 2000-11-09
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0807863718
Common Sense and a Little Fire traces the personal and public lives of four immigrant women activists who left a lasting imprint on American politics. Though they have rarely had more than cameo appearances in previous histories, Rose Schneiderman, Fannia Cohn, Clara Lemlich Shavelson, and Pauline Newman played important roles in the emergence of organized labor, the New Deal welfare state, adult education, and the modern women's movement. Orleck takes her four subjects from turbulent, turn-of-the-century Eastern Europe to the radical ferment of New York's Lower East Side and the gaslit tenements where young workers studied together. Drawing from the women's writings and speeches, she paints a compelling picture of housewives' food and rent protests, of grim conditions in the garment shops, of factory-floor friendships that laid the basis for a mass uprising of young women garment workers, and of the impassioned rallies working women organized for suffrage. From that era of rebellion, Orleck charts the rise of a distinctly working-class feminism that fueled poor women's activism and shaped government labor, tenant, and consumer policies through the early 1950s.
Author : Mary Elizabeth Pidgeon
Publisher :
Page : 84 pages
File Size : 23,27 MB
Release : 1954
Category : Women
ISBN :
Author : Dorothy Sue Cobble
Publisher : Princeton University Press
Page : 333 pages
File Size : 41,56 MB
Release : 2011-08-15
Category : History
ISBN : 1400840864
American feminism has always been about more than the struggle for individual rights and equal treatment with men. There's also a vital and continuing tradition of women's reform that sought social as well as individual rights and argued for the dismantling of the masculine standard. In this much anticipated book, Dorothy Sue Cobble retrieves the forgotten feminism of the previous generations of working women, illuminating the ideas that inspired them and the reforms they secured from employers and the state. This socially and ethnically diverse movement for change emerged first from union halls and factory floors and spread to the "pink collar" domain of telephone operators, secretaries, and airline hostesses. From the 1930s to the 1980s, these women pursued answers to problems that are increasingly pressing today: how to balance work and family and how to address the growing economic inequalities that confront us. The Other Women's Movement traces their impact from the 1940s into the feminist movement of the present. The labor reformers whose stories are told in The Other Women's Movement wanted equality and "special benefits," and they did not see the two as incompatible. They argued that gender differences must be accommodated and that "equality" could not always be achieved by applying an identical standard of treatment to men and women. The reform agenda they championed--an end to unfair sex discrimination, just compensation for their waged labor, and the right to care for their families and communities--launched a revolution in employment practices that carries on today. Unique in its range and perspective, this is the first book to link the continuous tradition of social feminism to the leadership of labor women within that movement.