All That is Solid Melts into Air: Worker Participation and Occupational Health and Safety Regulation in Ontario, 1970-2000.

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
All That is Solid Melts into Air: Worker Participation and Occupational Health and Safety Regulation in Ontario, 1970-2000.
Abstract
"[P]rovides a historical analysis of worker participation and occupational health and safety regulation in Ontario from 1970 to 2000 in light of the rise of neoliberal policies. [The authors] describe a shift from systems of mandated partial self-regulation in which workers had to participate, supported by external enforcement of regulations, to more ambiguous models that included the downsizing of government and voluntary compliance by employers." --Editors' introduction. Contents: Acts of God, acts of man: the invisibility of workplace death / Jordan Barab -- Criminal neglect: how dangerous employers stay safe from prosecution / Rory O'Neill -- Regulating risk at work: is expert paternalism the answer to workers irrationality? / Peter Dorman -- Silicosis and the on-going struggle to protect workers's health / Gerald Markowitz and David Rosner -- How safe are U.S. workplaces for Spanish-speaking workers? / Laura H. Rhodes -- Got air? The campaign to improve indoor air quality at the City University of New York / Joan Greenbaum and David Kotelchuck -- State or society? The rise and repeal of OSHA's ergonomics standard / Vernon Mogensen -- The ten-percenters: gender, nationality, and occupational health in Canada / Penney Kome -- All that is solid melts into air: worker participation in Ontario, 1970-2000 / Robert Storey and Eric Tucker -- The sinking of the neoliberal P-36 platform in Brazil / Carlos Eduardo Siqueira and Nadia Haiama-Neurohr -- Health and safety at work in Russia and Hungary: illusion and reality in the transition crisis / Michael Haynes and Rumy Husan.
Book Title
Worker Safety under Siege: Labor, Capital, and the Politics of Workplace Safety in a Deregulated World
Place
Armonk, N.Y
Publisher
M.E. Sharpe
Date
2006
Pages
157-186
Language
English
ISBN
0-7656-1448-0 0-7656-1449-9
Short Title
Worker safety under siege
Library Catalog
laurentian.concat.ca
Call Number
HD7261 .W67 2006, 363.11
Notes

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Table of Contents: Acts of God, acts of man : the invisibility of workplace death / Jordan Barab -- Criminal neglect : how dangerous employers stay safe from prosecution / Rory O'Neill -- Regulating risk at work : is expert paternalism the answer to workers irrationality? / Peter Dorman -- Silicosis and the on-going struggle to protect workers's health / Gerald Markowitz and David Rosner -- How safe are U.S. workplaces for Spanish-speaking workers? / Laura H. Rhodes -- Got air? The campaign to improve indoor air quality at the City University of New York / Joan Greenbaum and David Kotelchuck -- State or society? The rise and repeal of OSHA's ergonomics standard / Vernon Mogensen -- The ten-percenters : gender, nationality, and occupational health in Canada / Penney Kome -- All that is solid melts into air : worker participation in Ontario, 1970-2000 / Robert Storey and Eric Tucker -- The sinking of the neoliberal P-36 platform in Brazil / Carlos Eduardo Siqueira and Nadia Haiama-Neurohr -- Health and safety at work in Russia and Hungary : illusion and reality in the transition crisis / Michael Haynes and Rumy Husan.

Citation
Storey, R., & Tucker, E. (2006). All That is Solid Melts into Air: Worker Participation and Occupational Health and Safety Regulation in Ontario, 1970-2000. In V. Mogensen (Ed.), Worker Safety under Siege: Labor, Capital, and the Politics of Workplace Safety in a Deregulated World (pp. 157–186). M.E. Sharpe. https://archive.org/details/workersafetyunde0000unse/page/156/mode/2up