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This article reviews the book, "Eugene Debs, Citizen and Socialist," by Nick Salvatore.
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Contents: Part 1. A Contrasting Regional Perspective: Conrad, Margaret; 'Sundays always make me think of home': time and place in Canadian women's history. Part 2: Native Women: 1. Mitchell, Marjorie and Anna Franklin; When you don't know the language, listen to the silence: An historical overview of Native Indian women in B.C. [First Nations women] -- 2. Ravicz, Marilyn and Diane Battung and Laura Buker; Rainbow women of the Fraser Valley: lifesongs through the generations. Part 3. Asian Women: 1. Adilman, Tamara; A preliminary sketch of Chinese women and work in British Columbia, 1858-1950 -- 2. van Dieren, Karen; The response of the WMS to the immigration of Asian women 1888-1942 -- 3. Doman, Mahinder Kaur; A note on Asian Indian women in British Columbia, 1900-1935. Part 4. Gentlewomen: 1. Gresko, Jascqueline; 'Roughing it in the Bush' in British Columbia: Mary Moody's pioneer life in New Westminister, 1859-1863 -- 2. Pazdro, Roberta; From pastels to chisel: the changing role of BC women artists -- 3. Barber, Marilyn; The gentlewomen of Queen Mary's Coronation Hostel. Part 5. Education: 1. Riley, Barbara; Six saucepans to one: domestic science vs. the home in British Columbia, 1900-1930 -- 2. Stewart, Lee; Women on campus in British Columbia: strategies for survival, years of war and peace, 1906-1920 -- 3. Small, Marion; Postscript: women in whose honour BC schools have been named. Part 6. Unpaid Workers. 1. Weiss, Gillian; The brightest women of our land: Vancouver clubwomen 1919-1928 -- 2. Dennison, Carol; They also served: the British Columbia Women's Institutes in two world wars -- 3. MacQuuen, Bonnie; Domesticity and discipline: the Girl Guides in British Columbia, 1910-1943 -- 4. Ogg, Kathryn; 'Especially when no one agrees': an interview with May Campbell. Part 7. Social Legislation: 1. Davies, Megan; 'Services rendered, rearing children for the state': Mothers' pensions in British Columbia, 1919-1931 -- 2. Matters, Indiana; Sinners or sinned against? historical aspects of female juvenile delinquency in British Columbia. Part 8. Labour and Auxiliaries: 1. Bernanrd, Elaine; Last back: folklore and the telephone operators in the 1919 Vancouver general strike -- 2. Diamond, Sara; A union man's wife: the Ladies Auxiliary Movement in the IWA, the Lake Cowichan experience.[1930s] -- 3. Bannerman, Josie and Kathy Chopik and Ann Zurbrigg; Cheap at half the price: the history of the fight for equal pay in BC. Part 9. Health: 1. Whittaker, Jo Ann; The search for legitimacy: nurses' registration in British Columbia , 1913-1935 -- 2. Bishop, Mary F.; Vivian Dowding: birth control activist 1892 [contraceptive use in British Columbia] -- 3. Lewis, Norah L.; Reducing maternal mortality in British Columbia: an educational process. Part 10. Politicians: 1. Norcross, Elizabeth; Mary Ellen Smith: the right women in the right place at the right time [1863-1933; first woman in any provincial legislature in Canada, first female cabinet minister in the British Empire in 1921 'minister without portfolio' -- 2. Walsh, Susan; The peacock and the guinea hen: political profiles of Dorothy Gretchen and Grace MacInnis. [Dorothy Gretchen Steeves, 1891-1970 and Grace MacInnis 1905-1991; BC's first female member of parliament] -- 3. Proom, Juliette; Tilly Jean Rolston: she knew how to throw a party. [1887-1953, first woman cabinet minster with portfolio in Canada, Education minister in W.A.C. Bennett's first cabinet] -- 4. Carter, Connie and Eileen Daust; From home to house: women in the BC legislature. Part 11. World War Two: 1. Wade, Susan; Joan Kennedy and the British Columbia Women's Service Corps -- 2. Turnbull, Elsie G.; Women at Cominco during the Second World War.
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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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Les auteurs tentent de vérifier empiriquement la relation entre le climat organisationnel et la perception de l'instrumentation des syndicats tout en considérant l'effet de la satisfaction au travail sur la relation entre ces deux variables.
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This article reviews the book, "The Making of a Socialist: The Recollections of T.C. Douglas," edited by Lewis H. Thomas.
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The paper presents an adaptation of a Chamberlain-Kuhn costs of agreement-costs of disagreement model explaining strike incidence and duration as functions of economic factors. The emphasis is on testing this model, rather than «explaining» strike activity. The results indicate the economic model fails to explain strike incidence, but does better at explaining strike duration, given incidence.
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This article reviews the book, "The Diary of Beatrice Webb, Volume One, 1873-1892: Glitter Around and Darkness Within," edited by Norman and Jeanne MacKenzie.
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This article reviews the book, "La sécurité d'emploi dans l'industrie de la construction au Québec, un rêve impossible?," by Claudine Leclerc & Jean Sexton.
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This article reviews the book, "Solidarity: Poland's Independent Trade Union," by Denis MacShane.
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The Communist Party of Canada's (CPC) attempts to operate the United Front tactics laid down by Lenin and the Comintern in 1920-22 foundered on the CPC's failure to come to terms with the profound character of labour's post-war defeat or with its own marginality. The task of creating a mass party capable of leading, in the not-too-distant future, a revolutionary struggle for power encouraged the CPC to ignore the laborious and modest process of building support around small workplace issues and to prefer working through a spurious united front organization, the Trade Union Educational League, which was little more than a mouthpiece for a succession of abstract propaganda campaigns. When none of these propelled the party to mass status, but rather drove a wedge between it and the Trades and Labour Congress, the ground was prepared for acceptance of the diametrically opposite tactics of the "Third Period", which with much justice have been criticised for their political stupidity. The tardiness with which the CPC applied them underlined the fact that, however much the leaders of the labour movement might have "betrayed" the rank and file, it was hard to see them as "social fascists" who had to be combatted with even more vigour than that usually reserved for the bosses. From the beginning, when they terminated an interesting alliance between the CPC and national unionism, to the end, when they retarded the CPC's recognition of the possibilities opened up by the emergence of the CIO, these tactics had negative consequences. Yet they also helped bring limited political gains for the CPC, which entered the latter half of the 1930s stronger than it had ever been, and organizational advances for the Canadian working class, in the shape of at least the first few bricks in the foundations of mass industrial unionism. In addition, the complementary unemployed movement mobilized tens of thousands of workers and their families against the asperities of the depression. By 1936, the CPC had undeniably "carved out" for itself, a decent niche in the labour movement.
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This article reviews the book, "Les Métallos 1936-1981", by Jean Gérin Lajoie.
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This article reviews the book, "Employment Injuries and Occupational Illness 1972-1981," by Jim Wong.
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This article reviews the book, "Gain and Equity Sharing. Quality of Working Life," by Donald V. Nightingale.
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