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Solidarity forever? : race, gender, and unionism in the ports of Southern California / Jake Alimahomed-Wilson.

Lippincott Library HD8039.L82 U6285 2016
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Alimahomed-Wilson, Jake, author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Stevedores--California--History.
Stevedores.
Stevedores--California--Labour unions--History.
Minority labor union members--California--History.
Minority labor union members.
Women labor union memebers--California--History.
Women labor union memebers.
Labor movement--California--History.
Labor movement.
Racism--California--History.
Racism.
Sexism--California--History.
Sexism.
History.
California.
Physical Description:
xi, 205 pages ; 24 cm
Place of Publication:
Lanham : Lexington Books, [2016]
Summary:
The International Longshore and Warehouse Union (SLWU) remains one of the best examples of a labor union that traces its origins to radical anti-racist principles. Today, very few mainstream unions remain that were founded on militant, radical, and anti-racist principles. The ILWU remains the strongest port union in the United States, and its members are among the highest-paid blue-collar union workers in the world. Drawing on in-depth interviews, archival oral histories research, and ethnographic observation. Solidarity Forever? Race, Gender, and Unionism in the Ports of Southern California highlights the struggle of a key group of Black and women leaders who fought for racial and gender equality in the ports of Southern California. This book argues that institutional and cultural forms of racial and gender inequality are embedded within US trade union locals, leading to the following deleterious consequences for unions: (1) a proliferation of internal discrimination lawsuits within unions, which can cost the union international, or union local, potentially millions of dollars in legal fees and financial settlements, thereby redistributing precious financial resources that could be spent on key activities related to strengthening unions against outside attacks; (2) an erosion of trust and solidarity among workers, the key values of any successful union, which ultimately undermines the radical democratic potential of unions and rank-and-file participation in union politics; and (3) the undermining of workers of color and women workers as full and equal participants in the labor movement. The future of organized labor in the United States could very well be determined by the ability of the labor movement, and labor unions in particular, to listen to those workers who have been relegated to the margins of the global economy-workers of color, immigrant workers, women workers, and all workers in the Global South. Book jacket.
Contents:
1 Solidarity Forever? 1
2 The Persistence of Racism under the Union Contract 25
3 Racial Formation of the Ports of Southern California 45
4 Suing the Union 77
5 Is Discrimination a Weapon of the Boss... or the Union Local? 99
6 "Union Men" and the Crisis of Masculinity on the Waterfront 127
7 Breaking the "Steel Ceiling": Working-Class Women Resisting Sexism and Racism in the Union coauthored / Sabrina Alimahomed-Wilson Alimahomed-Wilson, Sabrina 155
8 Redefining Solidarity 177.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Other Format:
Online version: Alimahomed-Wilson, Jake, author. Solidarity forever?
ISBN:
9781498514347
1498514340
OCLC:
936205247

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