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From The Ashes Of The Old American Labor And America's Future
 

From The Ashes Of The Old American Labor And America's Future
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From The Ashes Of The Old American Labor And America's Future

by Stanley Aronowitz
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Basic Books (2000-04-25)
ISBN: 0465004091
EAN: 9780465004096
Binding/Media: Paperback - 272 pages
SKU: 09_431
Condition: Collectable Like New
Comments: EARLY PRINT. THE LARGER SOFTBACK AND PAGES ARE IN GREAT CONDITION, CLEAN AND TIGHT. SHIPPED RAPIDLY BY EXPEDITED POSTAL MAIL, AND BY AIR MAIL, ALSO TO APO/AFO.


Editorial Reviews


Product Description
Noted labor expert Stanley Aronowitz provides a definitive assessment of the last twenty-five years of labor history. He argues that unions have historically been important defenders of economic justice and that they remain so, even in today's booming economy. In particular, Aronowitz views the increasing disparity between the very rich and the working poor as evidence of the increasing need for labor's active role in America's economic and social agenda.

Amazon.com Review
The years of American economic prosperity after World War II, argues sociologist Stanley Aronowitz, resulted in the diminishment of the political influence the labor movement had acquired. By the 1980s, which included Reagan's decisive undercutting of the air-traffic controllers' strike and increasing concessions to management by unions, it made sense to question whether such a thing as a labor movement remained. Changes in Teamster and AFL-CIO leadership in the 1990s have increased the likelihood of strong labor's recurrence--but what would it take to make that happen?

Aronowitz presents a compelling case for the idea that "unions, if they are to thrive, must overcome the complacency of the last fifty years and expand labor's influence throughout politics and culture. But first labor must overcome its image as the representative of a narrow segment of the working population...." In intellectually strong but clear-spoken language, Aronowitz urges labor once again to define itself in sharp opposition to the ideology of corporate capitalism. He might attract some controversy with his suggestion that doing so requires a distancing of the unions from the Democratic Party (which, he reminds the reader, has drifted increasingly to the right under Bill Clinton, whose "reform" of welfare not only took money from the unemployed but may also keep wages down for the working poor). Might, that is, if labor had a strong enough voice for its dissent to be heard. Aronowitz delivers some rather intriguing proposals; it remains for history to determine whether an audience exists that will absorb and act upon them. --Ron Hogan

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