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Critiques the relationship between the academy and the labour movement. Argues that most academic research, and the incentive system that galvanizes it, is of little benefit to unions. Describes cases where labour and academics have successfully collaborated. Urges greater collaboration and discusses two universities in Quebec that allow community service while on sabbatical, including with the labour movement, as well as a Toronto-based initiative where graduate students do research of value to the Ontario Public Service Employees Union. See also the "comment " by Cy Gonick in the same issue as well as the article, "Academic Research on Labour: Strengthening Union-University Links," by Pradeep Kumar, published in the journal (no. 25, Spring 1990).
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Presents excerpts from the 20-hour oral history (recorded in 1977) of the Communist labour organizer, Patrick Lenihan, who reminisces about his time in the mining camps of Alberta and British Columbia in the 1930s. Also discusses the Communist effort to unite the Canadian and US mine worker unions in the late 1930s. Includes a photo of Lenihan.
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In this paper, the author examines some of the pros and cons of collective bargaining in University faculties.
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This paper presents the union point of view on collective bargaining costing.
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The article reviews the book, "Patrick Lenihan: From Irish Rebel to founder of Canadian public sector unionism," by Jack Tarasoff.
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Patrick Lenihan displayed rare courage and unwavering commitment to social justice, from his childhood in revolutionary Ireland through his leading role in the Communist Party of Canada to the formation of the first national union of public employees. Patrick Lenihan: From Irish Rebel to Founder of Canadian Public Sector Unionism chronicles a lifetime of rebellion, protest, and organizing, aganist the backdrop of the major economic, social, and political struggles of this century. Lenihan was constantly watched, repeatedly arrested, and often imprisoned, but he emerged time and again as a leader in the cause of the downtrodden, the working poor, and the unemployed. The On-to-Ottawa Trek, the work camps of the 1930's, the radicalism of the western mine towns, the Cold War -- Pat Lenihan was involved in it all, front and center. Drawn from interviews conducted by Gilbert Levine and written in an unadorned, engaging style, Patrick Lenihan is far more than the story of Canada's most infuential and colorful figures. It makes a valuable contribution to our understanding of western radicalism, Canadian communism, state repression union organizing, and the daily struggles which have shaped 20th-century Canada. --Publisher's description
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