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Afterword: Lessons from the New Labor Movement for the Old
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface and Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction: Toward a New Labor Movement? Organizing New York City’s Precariat 1
-
Part I IMMIGRANT UNION ORGANIZING AND UNION- COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIPS
- 1. Taking Aim at Target: West Indian Immigrant Workers Confront the Difficulties of Big-Box Organizing 25
- 2. Organizing Immigrant Supermarket Workers in Brooklyn: A Union-Community Partnership 49
- 3. Faith, Community, and Labor: Challenges and Opportunities in the New York City Living Wage Campaign 70
- 4. United New York: Fighting for a Fair Economy in “The Year of the Protester” 88
-
Part II ORGANIZING THE PRECARIAT, OLD AND NEW
- 5. Infusing Craft Identity into a Noncraft Industry: The Retail Action Project 113
- 6. Street Vendors in and against the Global City: VAMOS Unidos 134
- 7. Protecting and Representing Workers in the New Gig Economy: The Case of the Freelancers Union 150
-
Part III IMMIGRANT STRUGGLES FOR JUSTICE IN AND BEYOND THE WORKPLACE
- 8. The High- Touch Model: Make the Road New York’s Participatory Approach to Immigrant Organizing 173
- 9. Bridging City Trenches: The New York Civic Participation Project 187
- 10. Creating “Open Space” to Promote Social Justice: The MinKwon Center for Community Action 208
-
Part IV GOING NATIONAL: NEW YORK’S WORKER CENTERS EXPAND
- 11. An Appetite for Justice: The Restaurant Opportunities Center of New York 229
- 12. Not Waiting for Permission: The New York Taxi Workers Alliance and Twenty- First- Century Bargaining 246
- 13. “Prepare to Win”: Domestic Workers United’s Strategic Transition following Passage of the New York Domestic Workers’ Bill of Rights 266
- Afterword: Lessons from the New Labor Movement for the Old 289
- Notes 295
- Bibliography 319
- About the Contributors 341
- Index 345
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface and Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction: Toward a New Labor Movement? Organizing New York City’s Precariat 1
-
Part I IMMIGRANT UNION ORGANIZING AND UNION- COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIPS
- 1. Taking Aim at Target: West Indian Immigrant Workers Confront the Difficulties of Big-Box Organizing 25
- 2. Organizing Immigrant Supermarket Workers in Brooklyn: A Union-Community Partnership 49
- 3. Faith, Community, and Labor: Challenges and Opportunities in the New York City Living Wage Campaign 70
- 4. United New York: Fighting for a Fair Economy in “The Year of the Protester” 88
-
Part II ORGANIZING THE PRECARIAT, OLD AND NEW
- 5. Infusing Craft Identity into a Noncraft Industry: The Retail Action Project 113
- 6. Street Vendors in and against the Global City: VAMOS Unidos 134
- 7. Protecting and Representing Workers in the New Gig Economy: The Case of the Freelancers Union 150
-
Part III IMMIGRANT STRUGGLES FOR JUSTICE IN AND BEYOND THE WORKPLACE
- 8. The High- Touch Model: Make the Road New York’s Participatory Approach to Immigrant Organizing 173
- 9. Bridging City Trenches: The New York Civic Participation Project 187
- 10. Creating “Open Space” to Promote Social Justice: The MinKwon Center for Community Action 208
-
Part IV GOING NATIONAL: NEW YORK’S WORKER CENTERS EXPAND
- 11. An Appetite for Justice: The Restaurant Opportunities Center of New York 229
- 12. Not Waiting for Permission: The New York Taxi Workers Alliance and Twenty- First- Century Bargaining 246
- 13. “Prepare to Win”: Domestic Workers United’s Strategic Transition following Passage of the New York Domestic Workers’ Bill of Rights 266
- Afterword: Lessons from the New Labor Movement for the Old 289
- Notes 295
- Bibliography 319
- About the Contributors 341
- Index 345