Reorganizing the Rust Belt: An Inside Study of the American Labor Movement

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University of California Press, 2004 - Business & Economics - 292 pages
"Based on his immersion in heated campaigns, Lopez analyzes just how difficult organizing for today's trade unions can be. Still the Sisyphean effort goes on, led by unions, such as SEIU, which notch up victories despite the uphill struggle. Lopez's participant observation is a model of clarity, theoretical imagination and methodological innovation. It is a must-read for anyone who wants to understand why unions are so weak in the US, and how they could become stronger."--Michael Burawoy, President of the American Sociological Association

"Lopez's beautifully written, lucid analysis of the new labor movement bristles with insights. This rare insider's account of contemporary organizing consistently avoids the easy answers and relentlessly confronts the limitations of union achievements, even as he appreciates their transformative potential."--Ruth Milkman, Director, UC Institute for Labor and Employment and author of Farewell to the Factory

"Reorganizing the Rust Belt is the best ethnography around of what it's like, day-to-day, to be inside an organizing campaign and contract mobilization. Lopez brings to life the limits and problems, the changes over time, the victories and ambiguities, experienced by workers and organizers in a progressive union."--Dan Clawson, author of The Next Upsurge: Labor and the New Social Movements

 

Contents

Introduction From Business Unionism to Social Movement Unionism
1
Rosemont Pavilion
29
See You Next Year The Failure of Traditional Organizing Tatics
37
Its Union Why FacetoFace Organizing and Collective Action Tactics Succeed
63
Organizing and Organization
93
The New Urban Politics of Allegheny County Pennsylvania
101
Save Our Kanes Bypassing Organizational Structures
108
We Want a Contract Confronting Business Union Organization
127
We Will Not Be Silenced Escalating Mobilization
164
Whatever It Takes as Long as It Takes Exploiting Antiunionism
189
The Ambiguity of Victories
211
Social Movement Unionism and Social Movement Theory
215
Appendix
223
Notes
237
Bibliography
265
Index
283

Social Movement Unionism and the Problem of Power
146
Megacorp and the SEIU in Pennsylvania
153

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About the author (2004)

Steven Henry Lopez is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Ohio State University.

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