Editor's Introduction

IF 0.3 Q4 INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR
Leon Fink
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In this thoughtful assessment of Oregon's internally conflicted Timber Unity rank and file—a movement based on marginal, independent timber contractor-producers and small sawmill operators who draw variously on old-Wobbly and antiregulatory rhetoric redirected at “elitist” protectors of the spotted owl and a recreation-oriented middle class—Beda discovers a microcosm of a larger rural shift away from radical working-class identities (see A. Brooke Boulton's accompanying Common Verse poem) toward the defensiveness of populist backlash.Francis Ryan tracks an important but little-noticed component of the post–World War II labor force: school crossing guards. Born of the Baby Boom expansion of school-age children combined with a population of mothers eager for rewarding part-time work, official, uniformed crossing guards—taking the place of otherwise overworked police officers—became a fixture at urban intersections beginning in the early 1950s. Although initially linked in the public mind to the “voluntary” sector associated with “PTA women” and others, Ryan convincingly connects them to a labor feminist tradition centered on an emergent public sector workforce. By the 1960s, the guards’ economic demands encompassed both benefits and wages, and their formalized associations began to affiliate with established unions like AFSCME and the SEIU. Not surprisingly, the urban fiscal crises of the 1970s also directly touched the interracial guard associations, who fought back against massive job cuts. Yet the real threat—and seeming denouement—to this once-classic urban occupation, suggests Ryan, came with a decline of collective, public protection of street corners by the guards, replaced by the hyper-individualized vigilance over children by their own parents.In the course of a larger biographical study of civil rights and labor icon, A. Philip Randolph, Eric Arnesen pauses here to zero in on Randolph's relation to what might be considered the ultimate expression of late 1930s Popular Front radicalism: the National Negro Congress. With a spirited assault on both racial and economic exploitation—critiquing the inadequacies of the New Deal, supporting interracial trade unionism, combating segregation , and opposing fascism—the NNC temporarily repaired a breach between Communist Party–linked militants led by Ben Davis Jr. and the heretofore vociferously anticommunist socialist, Randolph. Just how responsible (despite their public attempts to submerge their identity) was the party cadre for the NNC's direction and initial strategic success defines a sustained research quest. Against the “reassessment” of many recent historians in the service of a more broad-based, “grassroots” understanding of Popular Front initiatives like the NNC, Arnesen insists that the centrality of the party's role must be reckoned with.As is frequently the case, the books under review cover the labor map, touching down on a rich historical mix of geography and chronology. Subjects covered include at least three that our readers are not likely to have encountered before: turtle harvesters in the Caribbean, women working in the production of British cinema, and Mozambican migrants passing across the “night trains” to and from apartheid South Africa. Among generally positive and respectful treatment of their charges, Elizabeth Tandy Shermer tweaks Michael Kazin's history of Democratic Party successes for forgetting that given the flawed structure of American democracy, the party itself is “not enough to win and govern.” Similarly, Benjamin Goldfrank faults John French's otherwise “excellent” biography of Brazilian leader Lula for underplaying its hero's collaboration with a culture of “clientelism” that (at least temporarily) reversed his and his movement's fortunes. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Like Appalachian coal mining, the Northwest logging industry has not gone down without a fight. Again, somewhat akin to the politics of mineworking communities in West Virginia, the protagonists in ensuing bitter fights over jobs versus environmental protectionism have skewed traditional class alliances and threatened long-standing regional progressive traditions. As Steven Beda makes clear in his assessment of a still-smoldering controversy that upended ambitious cap-and-trade legislation to stem logging in 2020, environmental regulation combined with a more long-term sectoral economic decline have fueled a decidedly right-wing version of populism across the region since the early 1970s. In this thoughtful assessment of Oregon's internally conflicted Timber Unity rank and file—a movement based on marginal, independent timber contractor-producers and small sawmill operators who draw variously on old-Wobbly and antiregulatory rhetoric redirected at “elitist” protectors of the spotted owl and a recreation-oriented middle class—Beda discovers a microcosm of a larger rural shift away from radical working-class identities (see A. Brooke Boulton's accompanying Common Verse poem) toward the defensiveness of populist backlash.Francis Ryan tracks an important but little-noticed component of the post–World War II labor force: school crossing guards. Born of the Baby Boom expansion of school-age children combined with a population of mothers eager for rewarding part-time work, official, uniformed crossing guards—taking the place of otherwise overworked police officers—became a fixture at urban intersections beginning in the early 1950s. Although initially linked in the public mind to the “voluntary” sector associated with “PTA women” and others, Ryan convincingly connects them to a labor feminist tradition centered on an emergent public sector workforce. By the 1960s, the guards’ economic demands encompassed both benefits and wages, and their formalized associations began to affiliate with established unions like AFSCME and the SEIU. Not surprisingly, the urban fiscal crises of the 1970s also directly touched the interracial guard associations, who fought back against massive job cuts. Yet the real threat—and seeming denouement—to this once-classic urban occupation, suggests Ryan, came with a decline of collective, public protection of street corners by the guards, replaced by the hyper-individualized vigilance over children by their own parents.In the course of a larger biographical study of civil rights and labor icon, A. Philip Randolph, Eric Arnesen pauses here to zero in on Randolph's relation to what might be considered the ultimate expression of late 1930s Popular Front radicalism: the National Negro Congress. With a spirited assault on both racial and economic exploitation—critiquing the inadequacies of the New Deal, supporting interracial trade unionism, combating segregation , and opposing fascism—the NNC temporarily repaired a breach between Communist Party–linked militants led by Ben Davis Jr. and the heretofore vociferously anticommunist socialist, Randolph. Just how responsible (despite their public attempts to submerge their identity) was the party cadre for the NNC's direction and initial strategic success defines a sustained research quest. Against the “reassessment” of many recent historians in the service of a more broad-based, “grassroots” understanding of Popular Front initiatives like the NNC, Arnesen insists that the centrality of the party's role must be reckoned with.As is frequently the case, the books under review cover the labor map, touching down on a rich historical mix of geography and chronology. Subjects covered include at least three that our readers are not likely to have encountered before: turtle harvesters in the Caribbean, women working in the production of British cinema, and Mozambican migrants passing across the “night trains” to and from apartheid South Africa. Among generally positive and respectful treatment of their charges, Elizabeth Tandy Shermer tweaks Michael Kazin's history of Democratic Party successes for forgetting that given the flawed structure of American democracy, the party itself is “not enough to win and govern.” Similarly, Benjamin Goldfrank faults John French's otherwise “excellent” biography of Brazilian leader Lula for underplaying its hero's collaboration with a culture of “clientelism” that (at least temporarily) reversed his and his movement's fortunes. Less positive yet is Joseph Viteritti's treatment of Benjamin Holtzman's study of neoliberalism and New York City's fiscal crisis: curious readers will likely want to consult the original before making up their own minds.
编辑器的介绍
就像阿巴拉契亚的煤矿开采一样,西北地区的伐木业也不是没有斗争就衰落的。再一次,在某种程度上类似于西弗吉尼亚州矿工社区的政治,在随后的就业与环境保护主义的激烈斗争中,主角们扭曲了传统的阶级联盟,并威胁到长期存在的地区进步传统。史蒂文·贝达(Steven Beda)在他的评估中明确指出,自20世纪70年代初以来,环境监管与更长期的行业经济衰退一起,在整个地区助长了一种明显的右翼民粹主义。这场仍在酝酿中的争议颠覆了雄心勃勃的“总量管制与交易”立法,目的是在2020年阻止伐木。在这本对俄勒冈州内部矛盾的木材团结运动的深思熟虑的评估中,独立的木材承包商、生产商和小型锯木厂经营者,他们以各种方式利用旧的摇摆和反监管的言论,将矛头指向斑点猫头鹰的“精英主义”保护者和以娱乐为导向的中产阶级——贝达发现了一个更大的农村转变的缩影,从激进的工人阶级身份(见a .布鲁克·博尔顿随诗的《Common Verse》)转向对民粹主义反弹的防御。弗朗西斯·瑞安(Francis Ryan)追踪了二战后劳动力中一个重要但鲜为人知的组成部分:学校交警。从20世纪50年代初开始,由于婴儿潮时期学龄儿童的增多,加上许多母亲渴望兼职工作的回报,穿着正式制服的十字路口警卫取代了过度劳累的警察,成为城市十字路口的固定设施。虽然在公众的印象中,最初与“PTA妇女”等“自愿”部门联系在一起,但瑞安令人信服地将它们与以新兴公共部门劳动力为中心的劳动女权主义传统联系在一起。到20世纪60年代,卫兵的经济要求包括福利和工资,他们的正式协会开始与AFSCME和SEIU等老牌工会建立联系。毫不奇怪,20世纪70年代的城市财政危机也直接触动了跨种族警卫协会,他们反对大规模裁员。然而,真正的威胁——似乎是结局——对于这个曾经经典的城市占领来说,赖安认为,来自于警卫对街角的集体公共保护的减少,取而代之的是他们自己的父母对孩子的高度个性化的警惕。埃里克·阿内森在对民权和劳工偶像a·菲利普·伦道夫(a . Philip Randolph)进行更大规模的传记研究的过程中,在这里停下来,把注意力集中在伦道夫与可能被认为是20世纪30年代末人民阵线激进主义的终极表达的关系上:全国黑人议会。通过对种族和经济剥削的猛烈抨击——批评新政的不足之处,支持跨种族的工会主义,反对种族隔离,反对法西斯主义——NNC暂时修复了由小本·戴维斯领导的与共产党有联系的武装分子和迄今为止强烈反对共产主义的社会主义者伦道夫之间的裂痕。党干部对NNC的方向负责(尽管他们公开试图掩盖自己的身份),而最初的战略成功定义了一个持续的研究任务。与许多近代历史学家的“重新评估”相反,阿内森坚持认为,必须考虑到该党的中心作用,而这些作用是为了更广泛、更“基层”地理解像全国代表大会这样的人民阵线倡议。通常情况下,这些书评涵盖了劳工地图,触及了地理和年代的丰富历史组合。书中涉及的主题至少有三个是我们的读者以前不太可能遇到的:加勒比地区的海龟采收者,在英国电影制作中工作的妇女,以及穿越“夜间火车”往返于种族隔离的南非的莫桑比克移民。伊丽莎白·坦迪·谢默(Elizabeth Tandy Shermer)在对他们的指控进行普遍积极和尊重的处理时,对迈克尔·卡津(Michael Kazin)的民主党成功史进行了调整,因为他忘记了,鉴于美国民主的结构存在缺陷,民主党本身“不足以赢得胜利和执政”。同样,本杰明•戈德弗兰克也批评约翰•弗伦奇(John French)撰写的巴西领导人卢拉(Lula)传记本来“非常出色”,但书中对卢拉与一种“裙带主义”文化的合作轻描淡写,这种文化(至少暂时)逆转了卢拉及其运动的命运。约瑟夫·维特里蒂(Joseph Viteritti)对本杰明·霍尔茨曼(Benjamin Holtzman)关于新自由主义和纽约市财政危机的研究的处理就不那么积极了:好奇的读者可能会在做出自己的决定之前先查阅原文。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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