Ronald Schatz on the Labor Board Vets and the Rise of Industrial-Labor Relations

Ronald Schatz on the Labor Board Vets and the Rise of Industrial-Labor Relations

In this episode, labor historian Ronald Schatz speaks about the National War Labor Board. Recruited by the government to help resolve union-management conflicts during World War II, many of the labor board vets went on to have long and illustrious careers negotiating conflicts in a wide-range of sectors from the steel industry to public sector unionism. Some were recruited to mitigate unrest on college and university campuses in response to student unrest. While not a traditional labor history, the history of the labor board vets is one worth paying attention to both for what it tells us about past efforts to arbitrate labor-management conflicts, and what could be in store amid future conflicts.

Jaksot(125)

Brooke Harrington on Wealth Managers and the One Percent

Brooke Harrington on Wealth Managers and the One Percent

In April, the high volume leak of the Panama Papers revealed an often unseen world of money and power. The leak of 11.5 million files came from the Panama-based law firm Mossack Fonseca, which helps ...

3 Tammi 201754min

Christy Chapin on the Centrality of Insurance Companies to American Health Care

Christy Chapin on the Centrality of Insurance Companies to American Health Care

Why is health care in the United States so expensive? Why does the United States find it so difficult to provide quality, affordable health care to most of its citizens? What is the relationship among...

2 Joulu 201645min

Sarah Jaffe on Social Movements and the 2008 Recession

Sarah Jaffe on Social Movements and the 2008 Recession

The recent years since the 2008 recession have seen a growth of protest movements. Sarah Jaffe's book, Necessary Trouble, describes how people have been fighting back against bank bailouts, budget cut...

4 Marras 201640min

LaShawn Harris on Black Women and the Informal Economy

LaShawn Harris on Black Women and the Informal Economy

LaShawn Harris discusses how black women in the early twentieth century engaged in the informal economy - performing work that wasn't entirely legal - to get by and get ahead.

1 Loka 201640min

Sandy Hager on Public Debt and Inequality

Sandy Hager on Public Debt and Inequality

Who owns the U.S. public debt? Why is it such an important commodity in global capitalism? Why does public debt provoke such intense political debate? And how can the quantitative data on the ownershi...

1 Syys 201641min

Daniel Amsterdam on the Business Campaign to Expand Government Spending

Daniel Amsterdam on the Business Campaign to Expand Government Spending

2 Elo 201641min

David Harvey on A Brief History of Neoliberalism

David Harvey on A Brief History of Neoliberalism

Neoliberalism. It is a vexing term, especially for many in the United States. But it means to call attention to the policies that emphasized so-called free markets as well as the increased market regu...

1 Heinä 201641min

Sujani Reddy on Nursing and Empire

Sujani Reddy on Nursing and Empire

The history of nursing is inextricable from the history of capitalism and imperialism. Our guest today, Sujani Reddy, helps us understand the history of nursing through the lives and experiences nurse...

2 Kesä 201647min

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