两个镀金时代城市:纽约和芝加哥的城市政权和罢工的治安

IF 0.5 3区 社会学 Q4 POLITICAL SCIENCE
R. Schneirov
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自20世纪80年代以来,学者们一直认为,在镀金时代,城市政党机器通过赞助、非正式提供个人福利和有限的让步将劳动人民纳入其中,从而消除了持续的劳工和社会党替代方案,并将工人的战斗力和自信局限于工作场所。这一观点受到了纽约和芝加哥劳资纠纷监管的历史比较的挑战。在纽约,有组织的工人被从燕尾凯利政权的执政联盟中清除,该政权继承了特威德集团,警方经常使用胁迫手段来挫败罢工和恐吓社会党人。然而,在芝加哥,劳工和社会党是卡特·哈里森政权执政联盟的一部分,警方在许多罢工中采取了袖手旁观的立场。本文探讨了这两个城市在治安和社会力量平衡方面的对比,并试图通过考察重建结束时的政治解决方案、每个城市工人阶级的种族构成、每个城市劳工运动的不同特征来解释这种差异,以及劳工发起第三方挑战的能力——所有这些都是在地区差异的背景下进行的。它的结论是,历史学家不能假设工人在这一时期被纳入机器。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Urban Regimes and the Policing of Strikes in Two Gilded Age Cities: New York and Chicago
Since the 1980s, scholars have argued that during the Gilded Age urban party machines incorporated working people through the use of patronage, informal provision of personal welfare, and limited concessions, thereby eliminating sustained labor and Socialist Party alternatives and keeping workers’ militancy and assertiveness confined to the workplace. That view is challenged by a historical comparison of the policing of labor disputes in New York and Chicago. In New York, organized workers were eliminated from the governing coalition of the Swallowtail-Kelly regime that succeeded the Tweed Ring, and police routinely used coercion to defeat strikes and intimidate Socialists. In Chicago, however, labor and Socialists were part of the governing coalition of the Carter Harrison regime, and the police took a hands-off stance in many strikes. This article explores the contrast in policing and the balance of social forces in the two cities and seeks to explain the differences by examining the political settlements that concluded Reconstruction, the ethnic makeup of each city's working classes, the different characteristics of each city's labor movement, and labor's ability to mount third-party challenges—all in the context of regional variations. It concludes that historians cannot assume that workers were incorporated into machines in this period.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
12.50%
发文量
21
期刊介绍: Studies in American Political Development (SAPD) publishes scholarship on political change and institutional development in the United States from a variety of theoretical viewpoints. Articles focus on governmental institutions over time and on their social, economic and cultural setting. In-depth presentation in a longer format allows contributors to elaborate on the complex patterns of state-society relations. SAPD encourages an interdisciplinary approach and recognizes the value of comparative perspectives.
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