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This article reviews the book, "Joe Rapoport: The Life of a Jewish Radical," edited by Kenneth Kann.
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The author attempts to improve upon a certain number of collective bargaining coverage estimates mainly by reviewing union membership data in Canada.
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This article reviews the book, "Reasoning, Learning and Action," by Chris Argyris.
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This article summarizes the accepted view of the Irish in America, notably that they have always been a "city people." The author then surveys the sources of data on which the agreed interpretation is based. He demonstrates that for the crucial years of the Irish-American experience, the period 1815-75: (l) that the data base certainly is inadequate to prove the '"city people" hypothesis and (2) he speculates (and his speculations are clearly labelled as such) that a more realistic interpretation of the ambiguous data is that the Irish indeed were not a city people. The importance of this argument for historians of social class in North America is that it implies that Irish immigrants and their off-spring cannot necessarily be assumed to have formed a part of the urban working class.
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The study focuses on the perceptions that union and management officials have of interest arbitration in Ontario hospitals.
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This article reviews two books: "The Tragedy of Enlightenment: An Essay on the Frankfurt School," by Paul Connerton, and "The Political Philosophy of the Frankfurt School," by George Friedman.
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This article reviews the book, "The Automobile Revolution: The Impact of an Industry", by Jean-Pierre Bardou, Jean-Jacques Chana- ron, Patrick Friedcnson, James M. Laux.
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This article reviews the book, "Economic Inequality in Canada," by Lars Osberg.
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This article reviews the book, "Good and Faithful Labor: From Slavery to Sharecropping in the Natchez District, 1860-1890," by Ronald L.F. Davis.
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This paper is the H.D. Woods Memorial Lecture presented at the 1984 Annual Meeting of the Canadian Industrial Relations Association, Guelph, Ontario.
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This article reviews the book, "Britain and the Cold War, 1941-1947", by Victor Rothman.
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This article reviews the book, "Labour at the Crossroads", by Geoff Hodgson.
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This article reviews the book, "Unions and Universities: The Rise of the New Labor Leader", by Joel Denker.
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Introduces correspondence between Mackenzie King, who was then Minister of Labour, and Harriett Reid, who formerly worked for the United Mine Workers of America but was at the Mining Investigation Commission of Illinois, on the UMWA strike at Springhill, Nova Scotia, that ended in the workers' defeat in 1911. Argues that their comments on individuals in management and union leadership positions during the conflict illustrate the importance of personality and character when caught up in such historic events.
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The desire to participate in managerial affairs on the workers' part among unskilled and semi-skilled workers in a food factory is hypothesized here to be contingent on two factors: rewards' satisfaction (RS) and ideology toward participation (OP).
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