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This essay attempts to place Canadian workers' 1919 militancy in a national and international context. Utilizing freshly compiled strike data and focusing on events outside of Winnipeg, the paper argues that the 1919 revolt was nation-wide and part of the international post-war revolutionary upsurge. The new prominence of women and immigrant workers, reflecting the drive for industrial unionism, is emphasized.
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The editor notes that the issue contains papers presented at the 1919 Winnipeg General Strike symposium held at the University of Winnipeg in March 1983. The symposium's organizers, Nolan Reilly and Paul Stevenson, also served as guest editors for the issue. Also notes the change of the French title of the journal to Le Travail to avoid the sexist connotation of Le Travailleur, for which the editor apologized.
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Introduces two new sections in the journal on correspondence and debates, and thanks two departing members of the editorial board for their service.
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The article reviews and comments on "Family Time and Industrial Time. The Relationship Between the Family and Work in a New England Industrial Community," by Tamara K. Hareven, and "The Working Population of Manchester, New Hampshire, 1840-1886," by James P. Hanlan.
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This paper examines women in the Canadian socialist movement to illuminate their role within the institutional life of the movement and to analyze the ideological dimensions of the "woman question" before 1914. Socialist adherence to the primacy of woman's role in the home and to the family wage ideal, as well as their ambivalence toward working women, and an undeveloped vision of woman's role under socialism — all served to reinforce a secondary role for women in socialist organizations. Suspicion of bourgeois women's organizations and of autonomous women's groups generally, hampered socialist women from assuming leadership roles with some notable exceptions. While socialist analysis pointed to the exploitation of women as both workers and wives and mothers, women's issues and organizations remained peripheral and subordinale to the main task of overthrowing capitalism.
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This article reviews the book, "Out to Work: A History of Wage-Earning Women in the United States", by Alice Kessler-Harris.
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This paper attempts to go beyond individual-level explanations of attitudes towards unions by exploring the impact of-community. It is argued that factors operating at the aggregate level of the community help shape local industrial relations. A review of industrial relations literature documents that community constitutes a latent but nonetheless important variable.
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La principale conclusion de cet article est qu'il existe un lien significatif entre le mode de rémunération et le risque d'accidents qui est interactif avec le poste de travail, la remuneration au rendement s'accompagnant d'un risque réduit chez les ébénistes et menuisiers et accru chez les manœuvres. De plus, chez ces derniers, le risque d'accidents est significativement plus élevé pour certains sièges spécifiques de lésion: la colonne lombaire, les poignets et les doigts.
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This article reviews the book, "Women at Work", by Chris Aldred.
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This article reviews the books, "Idéologies au Canada Français 1940-1976 : Les mouvements sociaux. Les syndicats," edited by Fernand Dumont, Jean Hamelin and Jean- Paul Montminy.
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Les auteurs retiennent certains éléments pertinents à l'analyse systémique en relations industrielles et tentent de dégager une conception plus claire de ce champ d'étude.
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This article reviews the book, "Eugene Debs, Citizen and Socialist," by Nick Salvatore.
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Les auteurs étudient l'effet du mariage à une personne qui travaille à l'extérieur sur la progression de carrière de l'individu dans l'entreprise.
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This article reviews the book, "Collection Bargaining in the Public Service : the federal Experience in Canada," by Jacob Finkelman & Shirley B. Goldenberg.
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The article reviews and comments on "The Question of Class Struggle: Social Foundations of Radicalism During the Industrial Revolution," by Craig Calhoun, "Work, Society and Politics: The Culture of the Factory in Later Victorian England," by Patrick Joyce, and "English Culture and the Decline of the Industrial Spirit 1850-1980," by Martin Wiener.
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This article reviews the book, "Britain in Crisis: De-Industrialization and How to Fight It", by John Hughes.
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This article reviews the book, "The Finnish Revolution, 1917-1918," by Anthony Upton.
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Replies to Robert Sweeny's critique in the same issue by restating the core argument from the article, "All the Atlantic Mountains Shook," published previously in the journal (no. 10, November 1982) with additional documentation.
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L'auteur explore deux avenues de ce qu'il faut déjà entrevoir comme la crise contemporaine du syndicalisme nord-américain.
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This article reviews the book, "The Dream of Nation: A Social and Intellectual History of Quebec," by Susan Mann Trofimenkoff.
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