The decline of the American union movement—and how it can revive, by a leading analyst of labor Union membership in the
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New York City boasts a higher rate of unionization than any other major U.S. city—roughly double the national average—bu
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BETWEEN 2008 AND 2010, the progressive wing of the U.S. labor movement tore itself apart in a series of internecine stru
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In tobacco fields, auto and radio factories, cigarmakers' tenements, textile mills, print shops, insurance companie
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In A New New Deal, the labor movement leaders Amy B. Dean and David B. Reynolds offer a bold new plan to revitalize Amer
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Sharp decreases in union membership over the last fifty years have caused many to dismiss organized labor as irrelevant
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The Third World cities have been reinvented by the forces of globalization as the destinations of new investments, causi
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Based on long-term fieldwork, six vivid ethnographies from Colombia, India, Poland, Spain and the southern and northern
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