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This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY
3.0 IGO licence. It is free to read at Oxford Scholarship Online
and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open
access locations. In recent years, typhoons have struck the
Philippines and Vanuatu; earthquakes have rocked Haiti, Pakistan,
and Nepal; floods have swept through Pakistan and Mozambique;
droughts have hit Ethiopia, Kenya, and Somalia; and more. All led
to loss of life and loss of livelihoods, and recovery will take
years. One of the likely effects of climate change is to increase
the likelihood of the type of extreme weather events that seems to
cause these disasters. But do extreme events have to turn into
disasters with huge loss of life and suffering? Dull Disasters?
harnesses lessons from finance, political science, economics,
psychology, and the natural sciences to show how countries and
their partners can be far better prepared to deal with disasters.
The insights can lead to practical ways in which governments, civil
society, private firms, and international organizations can work
together to reduce the risks to people and economies when a
disaster looms. Responses to disasters then become less emotional,
less political, less headline-grabbing, and more business as usual
and effective. The book takes the reader through a range of
solutions that have been implemented around the world to respond to
disasters. It gives an overview of the evidence on what works and
what doesn't and it examines the crucial issue of disaster risk
financing. Building on the latest evidence, it presents a set of
lessons and principles to guide future thinking, research, and
practice in this area.
Daniel Clark demonstrates the dramatic impact unionization made on
the lives of textile workers in Henderson, North Carolina, in the
decade after World War II. Focusing on the Harriet and Henderson
Cotton Mills, he shows that workers valued the Textile Workers
Union of America for more than the higher wages and improved
benefits it secured for them. Specifically, Clark points to the
importance members placed on union-instituted grievance and
arbitration procedures, which most labor historians have seen as
impediments rather than improvements. From the signing of contracts
in 1943 until a devastating strike fifteen years later, the union
gave local workers the tools they needed to secure at least some
measure of workplace autonomy and respect from their employer.
Union-instituted grievance procedures were not without flaws, says
Clark, but they were the linchpin of these efforts. When
arbitration and grievance agreements collapsed in 1958, the result
was the strike that ultimately broke the union. Based on complete
access to company archives and transcripts of grievance hearings,
this case study recasts our understanding of labor-management
relations in the postwar South. |Clark demonstrates the dramatic
impact unionization made on the lives of textile workers in
Henderson, N.C., in the decade after World War II. Focusing on the
Harriet and Henderson Cotton Mills, he shows that workers valued
the Textile Workers Union of America for more than the higher wages
and improved benefits it secured for them. Members also placed
great importance on union-instituted grievance and arbitration
procedures, which most labor historians have seen as impediments
rather than improvements. Based on complete access to company
archives and transcripts of grievance hearings, this case study
recasts our understanding of labor-management relations in the
postwar South.
It is a bedrock American belief: the 1950s were a golden age of
prosperity for autoworkers. Flush with high wages and enjoying the
benefits of generous union contracts, these workers became the
backbone of a thriving blue-collar middle class. It is also a myth.
Daniel J. Clark began by interviewing dozens of former autoworkers
in the Detroit area and found a different story--one of economic
insecurity caused by frequent layoffs, unrealized contract
provisions, and indispensable second jobs. Disruption in Detroit is
a vivid portrait of workers and an industry that experienced
anything but stable prosperity. As Clark reveals, the
myths--whether of rising incomes or hard-nosed union bargaining
success--came later. In the 1950s, ordinary autoworkers, union
leaders, and auto company executives recognized that although jobs
in their industry paid high wages, they were far from steady and
often impossible to find.
It is a bedrock American belief: the 1950s were a golden age of
prosperity for autoworkers. Flush with high wages and enjoying the
benefits of generous union contracts, these workers became the
backbone of a thriving blue-collar middle class. It is also a myth.
Daniel J. Clark began by interviewing dozens of former autoworkers
in the Detroit area and found a different story--one of economic
insecurity caused by frequent layoffs, unrealized contract
provisions, and indispensable second jobs. Disruption in Detroit is
a vivid portrait of workers and an industry that experienced
anything but stable prosperity. As Clark reveals, the
myths--whether of rising incomes or hard-nosed union bargaining
success--came later. In the 1950s, ordinary autoworkers, union
leaders, and auto company executives recognized that although jobs
in their industry paid high wages, they were far from steady and
often impossible to find.
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