In authors or contributors

The Workers Organizing and Resource Centre: The Struggle Continues in Winnipeg

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
The Workers Organizing and Resource Centre: The Struggle Continues in Winnipeg
Abstract
In most communities the relationship between trade unions and social activist organizations is usually underdeveloped and uneven. Likewise trade unions usually have no organic connections to unorganized workers and contribute little to the task of representing these workers in their struggles against employers and government agencies. The Workers Organizing and Resource Centre (WORC), a collective administered by trade unionists and social activists, is an attempt to bridge this solitude. Since it was established in 1998, WORC has been the home to numerous working class advocacy organizations and a hub of progressive activity in Winnipeg. Its mandate is to facilitate the development of community organizations, provide advocacy work for non union workers, and to assist in organizing the unorganized. This paper describes the function that WORC plays in the Winnipeg progressive community and discusses the relationship to its sole source of funding, the national office of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers.
Publication
Just Labour: A Canadian Journal of Work and Society
Volume
1
Pages
50-57
Date
Winter 2002
Citation
Bickerton, G., & Stearns, C. (2002). The Workers Organizing and Resource Centre: The Struggle Continues in Winnipeg. Just Labour: A Canadian Journal of Work and Society, 1, 50–57. http://www.justlabour.yorku.ca/volume1/pdfs/jl_bickerton.pdf