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"The heroic and principled struggle of the Industrial Workers of the World to become the organization representing the working class in its contest with capital has been celebrated in story and song for most of this century. That they eventually lost this struggle is well known; less well understood is why. It is this why that concerns Mark Leier in Where the Fraser River Flows. In recounting the IWW's glory days in British Columbia, particularly the famous Free Speech Fights of 1909 and 1912, Leier shows that they were pitted against not just the bosses and government, but also against conservative elements within labour and the left. To ask what happened to the IWW, says Leier, is to ask a larger question-why is there no socialism?"--Page 4 of cover
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The article reviews the book, "Harvey and Jessie: A Couple of Radicals," by Jessie Lloyd O'Connor, Harvey O'Connor and Susan M. Bowler.
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Takes note of forthcoming conferences, research grants, and the 75th anniversary commemoration of Joe Hill. Reports that National Archives has received from the National Labour Relations Board records pertaining to the certification of unions from 1944 to 1947.
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Takes note of forthcoming conferences, a contest, and a database on Canadian industry in 1871 that is based on the census data for that year.
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The article reviews the book, "Syndicats, salaires et conjoncture économique, L'expérience des fronts communs du secteur public québécois de 1971 à 1983," by André Beaucage.
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The article reviews the book, "Les relations patronales-syndicales," by Jean Boivin and Jacques Guilbault.
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The article reviews the book, "The New Day Recalled: Lives of Girls and Women in English Canada, 1919-1939," by Veronica Strong-Boag.
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The article reviews the book, "Si le Travail m'était conté autrement...Les Travailleuses de la CTCC-CSN : quelques fragments d'histoire," by Nadia Fahmy-Eid and Louis Piché.
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The article reviews the book, "Femmes et emploi : le défi de l'égalité," by Hélène David.
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As a permanent population established itself on the island of Newfoundland in the 19th century, the various sectors of society jostled each other for a share of control over their society. In the Conception Bay outports of Harbour Grace and Carbonear the social divisions and alliances which spawned an active culture of resistance formed around ethno-religious groups, political affiliation, and social class. The first part of this paper will recount a number of diverse collective plebeian acts and look at the natives and loyalties connected with each. Part two deals with election violence with which the population used informal means to affect change in a formal theatre. Section three is devoted to the largest plebeian disturbance of the decade; the 1832 sealers' strike. Here fishermen overcame their various social biases to work in class ways for their common good.
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The article reviews the book "John Maclean," by B. J. Ripley and J. McHugh.
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The article reviews the book,"That Noble Dream: The 'Objectivity Question' and the American Historical Profession," by Peter Novick.
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The article reviews the book, "The Social Credit Phenomenon in Alberta," by Alvin Finkel.
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The article reviews the book, "The Dark Side of Victorian Halifax," by Judith Fingard.
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This article reviews the book, "British and Norwegian Offshore Industrial Relations : Pluralism and Neo-Corporatism as Contexts of Strategic Adaptation," by Svein S. Andersen.
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The article reviews the book, "Grupa pracownicza jako przedmiot i podmiot motywowania," by Alicja Kozdroj.
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July 27, 1918. Heavy heat burned down on the small mining town of Cumberland on Vancouver Island. In the nearby wildernes of Comox Lake, a special police constable broke through the bush to come shockingly face to face with a stranger. A slight, red-haired man stood holding a rifle. This was the fugitive they sought, considered subversive and dangerous. With no time to aim, the constable shot as he raised his own weapon. This is the "official" version of the events of that day. The life of Albert "Ginger" Goodwin, one of British Columbia's most colourful figures, had come to a controversial end. [This book] is the story of a remarkable man, and a fascinating period in BC history. Arriving on Vancouver Island in 1910, Ginger Goodwin joined hundreds of others slaving in the hellholes of the Cumberland Mines. There he found blacklung, explosions, and deadly vapours; hazards which killed hundreds of miners in a short century of coal mining. What he saw made him one of the most effective labour leaders the province has ever seen, and led ultimately to his untimely end. Susan Mayse combines the skills of the historian and novelist in this gripping biography. From fragments of recorded history, official documents, and exhaustive interviews with the coal miners who knew Cumberland and knew Ginger Goodwin, she has pieced together an extraordinary tale. --Publisher's desscription
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This article reviews the book, "Worker Dislocation : Case Studies of Causes and Cures," by Robert F. Cook.
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