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Cedric de Leon - The Origins of Right to Work: Antilabor Democracy in Nineteenth-Century Chicago - 9780801479588 - V9780801479588
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The Origins of Right to Work: Antilabor Democracy in Nineteenth-Century Chicago

€ 43.12
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Description for The Origins of Right to Work: Antilabor Democracy in Nineteenth-Century Chicago Paperback. Num Pages: 184 pages, 12, 2 black & white halftones, 5 tables, 4 line drawings, 1 charts. BIC Classification: 1KBBNC; 3JH; HBJK; HBLL; HBTB; JHBL. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 158 x 235 x 16. Weight in Grams: 310.

"Right to work" states weaken collective bargaining rights and limit the ability of unions to effectively advocate on behalf of workers. As more and more states consider enacting right-to-work laws, observers trace the contemporary attack on organized labor to the 1980s and the Reagan era. In The Origins of Right to Work, however, Cedric de Leon contends that this antagonism began a century earlier with the Northern victory in the U.S. Civil War, when the political establishment revised the English common-law doctrine of conspiracy to equate collective bargaining with the enslavement of free white men. In doing so, de Leon connects past and present, raising critical questions that address pressing social issues. Drawing on the changing relationship between political parties and workers in nineteenth-century Chicago, de Leon concludes that if workers’ collective rights are to be preserved in a global economy, workers must chart a course of political independence and overcome long-standing racial and ethnic divisions.

Product Details

Format
Paperback
Publication date
2015
Publisher
Cornell University Press
Condition
New
Number of Pages
184
Place of Publication
Ithaca, United States
ISBN
9780801479588
SKU
V9780801479588
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-1

About Cedric de Leon
Cedric de Leon is Associate Professor of Sociology at Providence College. He is the author of Party and Society: Reconstructing a Sociology of Democratic Party Politics and co-editor of Building Blocs: How Parties Organize Society. Before becoming a professor he was by turns an organizer, a local union president, and a rank-and-file activist in the U.S. labor movement.

Reviews for The Origins of Right to Work: Antilabor Democracy in Nineteenth-Century Chicago
Cedric de Leon's stunning new book, The Origins of the Right to Work: Antilabor Democracy in Nineteenth-Century Chicago, offers a powerful reinterpretation of race, class, and party in the middle decades of the nineteenth century.... The right to work, de Leon shows, was not a twentieth-century invention developed to dismantle long established New Deal accomplishments. On the contrary, right to work politics have much deeper and more interesting antecedents reaching back to the anti-slavery politics of the mid-nineteenth century.
Victoria Hattam
Perspectives on Politics
Political rhetoric is shaped by historical context. De Leon does an excellent job in using this point to help explain the historical foundations oftoday's antilabor political climate. This analysis refreshingly reorients ourattention from the macroforces shaping the industrial and now postindustrial landscape to the more microlevel, examining how what groups sayabout these issues influences what they will later do about them.
William A. Mirola
American Journal of Sociology
Refreshingly, Cedric de Leon's The Origins of Right to Work: Antilabor Democracy in Nineteenth-Century Chicago is neither historically shallow nor politically imbalanced... de Leon has made an important contribution, one that all future scholars of anti-unionism must read.
Chad Pearson
Labour/Le Travail

Goodreads reviews for The Origins of Right to Work: Antilabor Democracy in Nineteenth-Century Chicago


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