Raising Retail: Organizing Retail Workers in Canada and the United States

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Raising Retail: Organizing Retail Workers in Canada and the United States
Abstract
Retail workers are a significant but largely unorganized group in Canada and the United States. However, in recent years, there has been a marked increase in efforts to organize retail workers, including pursuit of innovative structures and strategies. The author focuses on the dominant threads of contemporary retail organizing work in Canada and the United States, outlining three current organizing vehicles: unionization, store-based networks, and occupation or sector-based associations. The author then reflects on the strengths, weaknesses, and possibilities of these approaches, independently and collectively, and emphasizes the need to confront the social and cultural as well as the economic devaluation of retail workers.
Publication
Labor Studies Journal
Volume
40
Issue
1
Pages
47-65
Date
2013
Language
en
Accessed
12/16/16, 7:16 PM
Loc. in Archive
Sage CA: Los Angeles, CA
Library Catalog
Citation
Coulter, K. (2013). Raising Retail: Organizing Retail Workers in Canada and the United States. Labor Studies Journal, 40(1), 47–65. https://doi.org/10.1177/0160449X13486700