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American Unionism, Communism and the Canadian Labour Movement: Some Myths and Realities

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
American Unionism, Communism and the Canadian Labour Movement: Some Myths and Realities
Abstract
Examines critically three core `premises of Canadian labour historiography, namely that American unions had to move into Canada to establish a strong, viable labour movement, that the contribution of the Communist Party of Canada was largely negative; and that the relationship between the CIO and its Canadian affiliate, the Canadian Congress of Labour, was based on equality and autonomy.
Book Title
The Influence of the United States on Canadian Development: Eleven Case Studies
Series
Publication (Duke University. Commonwealth-Studies Center)
Date
1972
Publisher
Duke University Press
Place
Durham, N.C.
Pages
205-225
ISBN
978-0-8223-0274-2
Citation Key
abellaAmericanUnionismCommunism1972
Language
English
Extra
OCLC: 566432
Notes

Abstract by Desmond Maley.

Citation
Abella, I. M. (1972). American Unionism, Communism and the Canadian Labour Movement: Some Myths and Realities. In R. A. Preston (Ed.), The Influence of the United States on Canadian Development: Eleven Case Studies (pp. 205–225). Duke University Press. https://archive.org/details/influenceofunite00abel/page/204/mode/2up