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Are contemporary U.S. labor unions irrelevant, or in fact a changing force to be reckoned with as they grow into a new economy in a globalized America? Is the current political power exercised by U.S. labor unions more akin to the social movements of the sixties or the interest politics of the nineties? After winning the presidency of the AFL-CIO in 1995, John Sweeney and his colleagues have taken strides to make labor more important in the United States economically and politically, despite reduced membership. Here, four authors come together to survey the status of labor unions past, present, and future, nationally as well as through the microcosm of the labor situation in Ohio, one of the largest, most representative, and most electorally significant states in the country. The authors focus on union membership, leadership, political attitudes, strategies, and grassroots mobilization to paint a picture of union revitalization in a context of economic and social change. American labor still wields clout on Election Day, but union revitalization is a work in progress. For unions to matter every day to their members and leaders, they must consolidate their economic bases and rise to the challenges carefully documented in this book.
Published | Mar 15 2001 |
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Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 224 |
ISBN | 9780585381770 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Series | People, Passions, and Power: Social Movements, Interest Organizations, and the P |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
The authors have done a good job of weaving the historical work and involvement of labor in the electoral process with present day policies. The statistical data is valuable and could help shape organized labor's course of action in future years. This book is important reading.
William A. Burga, president, Ohio AFL-CIO
Combines a rich substantive base of knowledge about union activities in the U.S. (and Ohio, in particular) with a clear, focused empirical research agenda. The general theories of interest group politics are applied with grace and clarity to the case of labor unions. Several unique sources of data allow the authors to make their points in an especially persuasive way. This will soon be a required reference for all who study labor in politics. Professors who offer upper-level undergraduate and graduate courses will find much useful material here.
Paul E. Johnson, University of Kansas
This book is essential reading for anyone who seeks to understand how America's working families are making their voices heard in the political process. The authors present an informed and compelling account of the tremendous political achievements America's unions have made over the past five years, as well as a realistic reminder of the challenges that lie ahead.
John Sweeney, president, AFL-CIO
An empirically grounded book that provides many useful insights into labor's political past and its potential for the future. Highly recommended for academic social science and business collections, lower-division undergraduate through faculty.
Choice Reviews
An informative examination of selected aspects of organized labor's contemporary role in American electoral politics.
Industrial and Labor Relations Review
Unions have declined and mutated in the face of dramatic demographic, economic, and political changes over the past decades. However, they have also reacted to these changes and reinvented themselves, mobilizing as never before for renewed political and economic clout. In this masterful survey, based on a thorough analysis of unions and their members, we see the ins and the outs of the Sweeney revolution of the 1990s. This book is helpful to anyone hoping for a better understanding of the roles and impacts of unions in American political life, but also for those interested in interests groups and political mobilization more generally.
Frank Baumgartner, Penn State University
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