|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
In 1946, after a series of stormy strikes and a mass occupation at
Ford Motor Company's plant in Dagenham, Essex, thousands of workers
came together in a new branch of the Transport and General Workers
Union. Later, in the early 1980s, a band of dedicated workplace
activists brought branch 1/1107 to explosive life with support for
a number working-class causes, from equal opportunities to the
stunningly effective boycott of parts for South Africa.
"Notoriously Militant," which takes as its title a tabloid
journalist's verdict on the branch, covers the history of Ford's
Dagenham plant--and its roots in Henry Ford's early U.S.
activities--from 20th-century shop-floor struggles to the
21st-century fight against plant closure. Based on original
research and oral history, this study offers a primer for activists
and analysts on the confrontation between worker militancy and the
rigors of "Fordism." This book is a lively look at working-class
history as made daily by so-called "ordinary" workers, the links
between basic workplace struggles and revolutionary conflict, the
pressures towards "cooperation" between union and management, and
the interweaving of gender and ethnicity issues with the
class-based structures of a major industrial workplace.
Ramparts of Resistance examines the experience of British and US
workers during the last three decades to offer a broad analysis of
the need for a new independent politics of trade unionism. Recent
years have seen great changes in the trade union movement, from
waves of strikes in the 1970s to a battery of employer and state
onslaughts, culminating in the anti-union legislation of the 1980s
and 1990s. Looking at grassroots labour struggles, Cohen explores
issues of reformism, trade union democracy and the political
meaning of ordinary workplace resistance, and puts forward ideas
for change. Ramparts of Resistance examines the failure of the
union movement to rise to the neo-liberal challenge and calls for a
new politics of independent unionism and an explicitly class-based
renewal of 'workers' power'. Coming at a time when union activity
and membership involvement continues despite the odds, this book is
an inspiring guide to the direction that unionism should take.
|
|