Immigrants, Communists, and Solidarity Unionism in Niagara, c.1930–1960

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Immigrants, Communists, and Solidarity Unionism in Niagara, c.1930–1960
Abstract
Focusing on the Niagara region, this study explains the continued adherence of thousands of Canadian workers to communist-led unions during the Cold War era. It argues that co-operation between communist-led unions and communist-led ethnic clubs and other political and social activists in the pursuit of human rights, social justice, and environmental goals explains why thousands of workers continued to adhere to such unions despite intense red-baiting in the 1940s and 1950s. Reaching out to allies beyond the workplace in solidarity unionism was especially important because of the marginalization of communist-led unions within the Canadian labour movement. The study’s findings reinforce the view that local economic and political conditions played a significant role in shaping communist-led unions in Canada. The study also highlights the contribution of interethnic collaboration among immigrant workers to the development of the Canadian labour movement.
Publication
Labour / Le Travail
Volume
82
Pages
119-158
Date
Fall 2018
Language
en
ISSN
1911-4842
Accessed
1/4/19, 6:25 PM
Library Catalog
Rights
Copyright (c) 2018 Labour / Le Travail
Citation
Patrias, C. (2018). Immigrants, Communists, and Solidarity Unionism in Niagara, c.1930–1960. Labour / Le Travail, 82, 119–158. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1353/llt.2018.0038