Living wage campaigns are frequently presented as a quest for
economic justice by the labor movement. Often missed, however, is
that the living wage is very much a political issue at the local
level, and that the typical living wage cam2paign, needs to be
understood within the context of urban body. In this in-depth Oren
M. Levin-Waldman explains what factors led to the adoption of
living wage laws in four cities: Los Angeles, Detroit, Baltimore,
and New Orleans. Analyzing each of these cases through the
disciplinary lens of political science, the author shows that the
movements were the results of policy failures at the local level.
This scholarly approach shows clearly that the successful movements
grew out of the failure of local policymakers to adequately address
changes in the urban economic base and growing income inequality.
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