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Description
A classic account of low-wage workers’ organization that the US Department of Labor calls one of the “100 books that has shaped work in America.”
As low-wage organizing campaigns have been reignited by the Fight for 15 movement and other workplace struggles, Poor Workers’ Unions is as prescient as ever.
Author Bios

Vanessa Tait is a journalist and labor activist who received her PhD in sociology from the University of California, Santa Cruz. Her writings have appeared in New Labor ForumCritical Sociology, the Boston Phoenix, and the Guardian. Her radio work appears regularly on KPFA/Pacifica.

Cristina Tzintzún is the executive director of Workers Defense Project (WDP), a statewide, membership-based workers’ rights organization that is winning better working conditions for Texans. At WDP, Tzintzún has spearheaded efforts to ensure safe and dignified jobs for the nearly 900,000 construction workers that labor in the state. She also coedited Presente!: Latin@ Immigrant Voices in the Struggle for Racial Justice / Voces Inmigrantes Latin@s en la Lucha por la Justicia Racial.

More Info

Publication date: April 26, 2016

Table of Contents
Introduction: Organizing in the Margins
1. Unionizing the Movements: Economic Initiatives in the Civil Rights, New Left, and Women’s Movements
2. The Fight Within: Trade Unions Respond to the Movements
3. Building Economic Justice for All: A National Network for No-Wage and Low-Wage Workers 4. Community Organizing Goes to Work: ACORN’S United Labor Unions
5. “Organizing Where We Live and Work”: The Independent Workers’ Center Movement
6. Knocking at Labor's Door: Organizing Workfare Unions in the ’90s
7. Reviving an Activist Culture: The AFL-CIO’s Turn Toward Organizing Conclusion: Imagining a New Movement

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One of the greatest lessons the Russian state learned on March 8, 1917 was never to underestimate the women of Petrograd.  On that fateful morning, International Women’s Day, women workers threw down their tools and walked out of the factories and into the streets.