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Thousands of fast food workers walked off their jobs in 58 U.S. cities yesterday, an indictment of an economy that’s producing little more than McJobs. Some picket lines turned into temporary occupations, and several stores closed..
Ah, fall—when young (and old) unionists’ minds turn to thoughts of strategy. Required reading as you fly, ride, or hitchhike your way to L.A.
Non-union fast food workers’ strikes rightly caught the public eye this summer. But in an under-reported story, at the other end of the food chain, Washington farmworkers who supply Haägen-Dazs have been doing the same.
Wisconsin's daily sing-along, now two-and-a-half years old and still going strong, has grown into a kind of "sing-out strike."
In 1963 the AFL-CIO chose the wrong side of history and sat out the original march. This time, a sea of union T-shirts blanketed the National Mall.
Resumenes de artículos de Labor Notes de los EEUU, semana de 19 agosto, en español e inglés. Cuántos saben que la Marcha de 1963 fue organizada por activistas laborales negros? Summaries of Labor Notes stories for the week of August 19, in Spanish and English. Please pass them on to your...
This summer marks 50 years since 1963’s March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom drew more than 200,000 people.
A low-tuition community college is the target of an unusually frank attack.
Grassroots to grassroots, rank and file to rank and file: that’s the idea behind the coast-to-coast Summer of Solidarity Tour that touched down in Detroit, its third city, yesterday.
In a coordinated purge, Walmart has lashed out against retail workers who walked out in early June.
The writer behind "Send in the Drones" and "Imagine (You Have Healthcare)" teaches how to turn people's safe assumptions upside down in a familiar melody—and get them singing along.
Resumenes de artículos de Labor Notes de los EEUU, semana de 12 agosto, en español e inglés. Summaries of Labor Notes stories from the U.S. for the week of August 12, in Spanish and English. Please pass them on to your Spanish-speaking friends.
Lenny Moss, in his sixth outing as a hospital steward/detective, shows how a smart and empathetic steward, who is also fallible, tired, and overloaded, can not only solve a crime but fight decertification.
Hospitals are adopting Toyota's methods for squeezing more out of each worker. The result? Management by stress—and worse care for patients.
As state funding dwindles to zero, some public universities are turning to corporate sponsors like GE and MillerCoors.