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Community Unionism Without the Community? Lessons from Labor-Community Coalitions in the Canadian Child Care Sector

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Community Unionism Without the Community? Lessons from Labor-Community Coalitions in the Canadian Child Care Sector
Abstract
The theory and practice of community unionism has been central to discussions of alt-labor, union renewal, and revitalization, particularly in relation to union praxis at the urban or local scale. This comparative case study explores two labor-community campaigns to defend public child care services in the context of neoliberal austerity in urban/suburban space. While labor-community coalitions are a necessary—if not sufficient—condition for success, in urban/suburban contexts in which community allies are weak and municipal administrations hostile, public-sector unions must continue to play a leading role in campaigns despite the risk of being cast as defenders of sectional interests rather than of the public good. In such contexts, union involvement in community organizing is a necessary precursor to successful labor-community campaigns.
Publication
Labor Studies Journal
Volume
43
Issue
2
Pages
118-140
Date
June 2018
Language
en
ISSN
0160-449X, 1538-9758
Short Title
Community Unionism without the Community?
Accessed
7/19/18, 12:38 AM
Library Catalog
Crossref
Citation
Black, S. (2018). Community Unionism Without the Community? Lessons from Labor-Community Coalitions in the Canadian Child Care Sector. Labor Studies Journal, 43(2), 118–140. https://doi.org/10.1177/0160449X18763442