The politics of right to work : the labor federations as special interests, 1943-1979

Bibliographic Information

The politics of right to work : the labor federations as special interests, 1943-1979

Gilbert J. Gall

(Contributions in labor studies, no. 24)

Greenwood Press, 1988

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Includes bibliographies and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Gall has compiled what is almost certainly the definitive study of right-to-work campaigns at the national and state levels since the early 1940's. . . . The author's emphasis on carefully documenting these campaigns means that this book will primarily interest specialists in political science and labor history. Further, this book will be a handy reference source for other readers who want to separate rhetoric from reality on this contentious issue. Choice The Politics of Right to Work presents both a comprehensive history of organized labor's response to the challenges posed by the right to work movement and an in-depth examination of the partisan political dimensions of that challenge. The first full-length treatment of the subject to cover the period from the early 1940s through the late 1970s, the study uses qualitative and quantative analytical techniques to examine the political implications of states' attempts to restrict union security since the first right-to-work laws were passed in Novermber 1944.

Table of Contents

Tables Preface The Politics of Right to Work Labor Legislation and the Right to Work Principles and Politics "COPE"ing with Right to Work Campaign Promises Extended Discussions Union Security in the 1970s Right to Work in Perspective Appendix A. The Rice Index of Cohesion Appendix B. State Right-to-Work Elections Bibliographical Essay Index

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