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Pandemic and the Working Class: How US Labor Navigated COVID-19 New edition [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 328 pages, height x width x depth: 235x156x28 mm, weight: 513 g, 6 charts, 4 tables
  • Sērija : Working Class in American History
  • Izdošanas datums: 08-Apr-2025
  • Izdevniecība: University of Illinois Press
  • ISBN-10: 0252088646
  • ISBN-13: 9780252088643
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 33,90 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 328 pages, height x width x depth: 235x156x28 mm, weight: 513 g, 6 charts, 4 tables
  • Sērija : Working Class in American History
  • Izdošanas datums: 08-Apr-2025
  • Izdevniecība: University of Illinois Press
  • ISBN-10: 0252088646
  • ISBN-13: 9780252088643
During the COVID-19 pandemic, thousands of workers lost their jobs in sectors from hospitality to transportation, while healthcare and frontline service workers faced a new world of brutal hours in unsafe and even deadly conditions. Yet, as the US economy reopened, workers experienced a rare moment of leverage as demand for labor and government support powered a surge of collective action that allowed working people to seek rights, respect, and power on the job through resignations, walkouts, strikes, and union organizing. The lessons and legacies of this upsurge in organizing continue to shape work, activism, and politics across the nation today. Nick Juravich and Steve Striffler edit a collection that examines the effects of the pandemic on workers. Sections of the book focus on specific impacts and government efforts to restructure the economy; the dramatic effect of the pandemic on the hospitality industry; educators response on behalf of themselves and their students; frontline healthcare workers; and the innovative forms of labor organizing that emerged during and after COVID.

Contributors: Carlos Aramayo, Kathleen Brown, Sandrine Etienne, Ismael GarcĶa-ColÓn, Puya Gerami, Maura Hagan, Connor Harney, Devan Hawkins, Leigh Howard, Marian Moser Jones, Doris Joy, Nick Juravich, Eric Larson, Kathryn M. Meyer, Samir Sonti, Steve Striffler, Lia Warner, Andrew B. Wolf, and Jennifer Zelnick

Recenzijas

By covering various industries and time periods, this comprehensive collection provides us with an essential guide for exploring the significance of the pandemic to the working class.--Jamie McCallum, author of Essential: How the Pandemic Transformed the Long Fight for Worker Justice

Introduction   Nick Juravich and Steve Striffler
Part I. Opening Interventions



Work and the Labor Movement during the Pandemic   Nick Juravich and Steve
Striffler
The Diseases Are the Symptoms: Working-Class Plagues-COVID-19 and Deaths of
Despair   Devan Hawkins
Sorting Out the Politics of Inflation, Past and Present   Samir Sonti

Part II. Food, Labor, and Hospitality

Crises and Essential Workers: The Impact of COVID-19 on Farmworkers and
Guest Worker Programs   Ismael GarcĶa-ColÓn
The Battle of the Shutdown: How Hospitality Workers Confronted Disaster
Capitalism during the COVID-19 Pandemic   Carlos Aramayo

Part III. The Education Industry

No Cuts-No Cops-No COVID: The Graduate Employees Pandemic Strike at the
University of Michigan-Ann Arbor   Kathleen Brown
Disability Justice and the Education Labor Movement during the COVID-19
Pandemic   Kathryn M. Meyer
Archival Labor and Labor Power: Using COVID Collections to Rethink History
Making and the Labor Movement   Lia Warner

Part IV. The Healthcare Industry

COVID, Caregiving, and Coping: Nurses Frontline Work through a Pandemic
Year   Marian Moser Jones
Healthcare Social Workers on the Front Lines of the COVID-19 Pandemic:
Cracks, Flaws, and a Vision for Social Healthcare   Jennifer Zelnick, Leigh
Howard, Doris Joy, Maura Hagan, and Sandrine Etienne

Part V. New Forms of Organizing

Beyond Austerity America: Labor Animates New Coalitions in the Age of
COVID-19   Puya Gerami
Rediscovering Class: EWOC and Pandemic Labor Activism   Connor Harney
The Pandemic Revolt of New York Citys Immigrant Small Business Unions  
Andrew B. Wolf
Cannabis, COVID-19, and Racial Capitalism: Unionization in the Era of
Inequality   Eric Larson

Epilogue   Nick Juravich and Steve Striffler
Contributors
Index
Nick Juravich is an assistant professor of history and labor studies and the associate director of the Labor Resource Center at UMass Boston. He is the author of Para Power: How Paraprofessional Labor Changed Education. Steve Striffler is the director of the Labor Resource Center at UMass Boston. He is the coeditor of Organizing for Power: Building a Twenty-First Century Labor Movement in Boston.