ILRLR 3040

ILRLR 3040

Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2019-2020.

Undergraduate seminar whose topic changes depending on semester and instructor.

When Offered Fall or Spring.

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Syllabi:
  •   Regular Academic Session. 

  • 4 Credits Stdnt Opt

  • Topic: The Changing Community-Labor Connection

  • 14284 ILRLR 3040   LEC 001

    • MW Ives Hall 215
    • Jan 21 - May 5, 2020
    • Applegate, R

  • Instruction Mode: Hybrid - Online & In Person
    Recent community-labor collaborations to create new forms of collective representation have received considerable attention – and rightly so, since they have succeeded in reforming neoliberal modes of governing labor markets and workplaces. This course contextualizes these bottom-up innovations, by surveying the historical development of the intersection between community organizing and labor organizing. To understand the changing nature of the community-labor connection, we will examine successive case studies – from New England’s mill towns to Seattle’s ‘Fight for Fifteen’. We will use these cases not just to clarify the range of factors shaping the community-labor relationship across varying locales, but also to identify historical patterns in the resources that organizers drew upon and the constraints they faced in building solidarity within communities and among workers. Ultimately, our survey will highlight the recurrence of the community-labor connection throughout U.S. labor history, and the connection’s vital role in successive movements to democratize U.S. political economy.