Canadian Workers, American Unions
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Scott, Jack (Author)
Title
Canadian Workers, American Unions
Abstract
Canada is the only country in the world whose unions have headquarters in a foreign country. More than two-thirds of Canadian workers in the private sector pay dues to "international" head offices in the United States. Canadian Workers, American Unions continues the historical account begun in the first volume of Trade Unions and Imperialism in America, "Yankee Unions, Go Home!: How the AFL Helped the U.S. Build an Empire in Latin America." --Publisher's description
Series
Trade Unions and Imperialism in America
Volume
2
# of Volumes
2
Place
Vancouver
Publisher
New Star Books
Date
1978
# of Pages
240 pages
Language
English
ISBN
978-0-919888-82-1 978-0-919888-81-4
Accessed
9/2/25, 2:37 PM
Notes
Subtitle on cover: How the American Federation of Labor Took Over Canada's Unions.
Contents: International unionism: The first stage -- Business unionism and the continental labour market -- Foundation of empire: Territorial and economic expansionism -- Managing a colony - union style -- 1898: The year of decision -- Divide to conquer -- The crucial years: 1902-1903 -- Western radicalism precipitates a challenge -- War and conscription: The internationals on the side of militarism -- From the Winnipeg strike to the founding of the CIO -- The AFL and the politics of anti-Communism -- Summary and conclusion.
Citation
Scott, J. (1978). Canadian Workers, American Unions (Vol. 2). New Star Books. https://archive.org/details/canadianworkersa00scot/mode/2up
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