Labor's Struggles, 19451950
A Participant's View
New Ed edition
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Author
Contributions
- David Montgomery (Foreword) - Contributor
Publication
2003-02-13 - Cambridge University Press
Language
English
Word Count
43,750 words, Guess
Page Count
175 pages
Physical Format
Paperback
Identifiers
- Internet Archivelaborsstrugglesp00rich
- ISBN-100521533260
- ISBN-139780521533263
- Goodreads6259433
- OCLC Control Number659916464
and 2 more
- Better World Books9780521533263
- Open LibraryOL7745006M
Classifications
- LCCHD8072.5 .R53 1994
Description
Neither an autobiography nor a scholarly analysis, Labor's Struggles, 1945-1950: A Participant's View is a skillful blend of both genres. Informative and original in its insights and analyses, this book provides the reader with information available from no other source. These insights must be included in any subsequent efforts to interpret this period in labor history. Richter based this account largely on his own experience as legislative representative for the United Auto Workers-CIO from 1943 to 1947, as well as on documents and conversations from that period, supplemented with historical research. Active in the effort to educate the working class on all important historical and legislative issues and on the political process, Richter wrote and lectured often for UAW and other union audiences and authored a syndicated column that was frequently featured on the front pages of local union papers and city and state central council papers. This study of policy making in union headquarters and in Washington focuses on the 1945 splits within the CIO as well as the sharp divisions between the "social" CIO and the "opportunistic" AFL. In addition, it focuses on the Labor Management (Taft-Hartley) Act of 1947, which divided an already fragmented movement. A foreword by David Montgomery, a prominent labor historian, introduces the author's story.
First Sentence
At the end of World War II, labor's aggregate numbers suggested real power.
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- Labor's Struggles, 19451950
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