Your search
Results 301 resources
-
This article reviews the book, "Dorothea Lange and the Documentary Tradition," by Karin Becker Ohrn.
-
This article reviews the book, "Subject Women. Where Women Stand Today —Politically, Economically, Socially, Emotionally," by Ann Oakley.
-
This article reviews the book, "Black Scandal: America and the Liberian Labor Crisis, 1929-1936," by I.K. Sundiata.
-
The 1934 Flin Flon Strike occurred largely as a reaction to the single enterprise nature of the community. The confrontation centred on the dominant position of the Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting Company Ltd. (HBM&S) within the community. The struggle featured the striving for legitimacy of the Mine Workers' Union of Canada (MWUC) and a Company orchestrated, anti-communist crusade. In the end the communist bogey prevailed and the workers' organization was defeated.
-
This article reviews the book, "The Scope of Faculty Collective Bargaining: An Analysis of Faculty Union Agreements at Four-Year Institutions of Higher Education," by R.L. Johnston.
-
This article reviews the book: "In The Rapids of Revolution: Essays. Articles, and Letters. 1902-23," by John MacLean, edited by Nan Milton.
-
This article reviews the book, "Organized Workers and Socialist Politics in Interwar Japan," by Stephen S. Large.
-
This article reviews the book, "English America and the Restoration Monarchy of Charles II. Transatlantic Politics, Commerce, and Kinship," by J.M. Sosin.
-
This article reviews the book, "Ideology and Popular Protest," by George Rudé.
-
This article reviews the book, "European Labour Protest, 1848-1939," by Dick Geary.
-
This article reviews the book, "Diary of a Strike," 2nd edition, by Bernard Karsh.
-
This article examines the contest between the United Steelworkers of America and management at Dominion Foundries and Steel (Dofasco) for the loyalty of Dofasco workers. Situated in the 1930s and 1940s during the rise and consolidation of industrial unionism in Canada, the article traces the development at Dofasco of a corporate welfare, human relations approach to management that effectively challenged and ultimately defeated the drive for unionization. At the same time Dofasco pursued a consistent and oftentimes ruthless policy of dismissing union organizers and activists from within its workforce. Both strategies combined to produce what this paper terms the "Dofasco Way." The centrepiece of the "Dofasco Way" was the successful operation of a profit-sharing Fund. For only the profit-sharing Fund brought together both elements of the "Dofasco Way": loyalty and fear among the workers. Loyalty was created because the Fund provided security. Fear was created through threats to terminate the Fund should the company ever be organized. In the end, however, it was the programmes designed to produce loyalty that led to the Dofasco workers' rejection of unionism.
-
This article reviews the book, "Girls, Wives, Factory Lives," by Anna Pollert.
-
This article reviews the book, "The Syndicalist Tradition and Italian Fascism," by David D. Roberts.
-
This article reviews the book, "Class Against Itself: Power in the Nationalisation of the British Steel Industry," by Doug McEachern.
-
This article reviews the book, "A History of the Guyanese Working People, 1881-1905," by Walter Rodney.
-
This article reviews the book, "The Future of North America," by Elliot Feldman and Neil Nevitte, eds.
-
This article reviews the book, "Les cordonniers, artisans du cuir," by M.-A. Thivierge et N. Thivierge.
-
This article reviews the book, "The Structured [Crowd]: Essays in English Social History," by Harold Perkins.
-
This article reviews the book, "The Welfare State and Canadian Federalism," by Keith G. Banting.
Explore
Resource type
- Book (8)
- Journal Article (291)
- Thesis (2)