The Making of Women Trade Unionists

The Making of Women Trade Unionists
Title The Making of Women Trade Unionists PDF eBook
Author Gill Kirton
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 138
Release 2017-03-02
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 1351886096

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In what will be essential reading for all industrial relations scholars, Gill Kirton considers the social construction of women's trade union participation in the context of male dominated trade unions. Exploring the making and progress of women's trade union careers, this book locates the issues within the context of their experiences of three interlocking social institutions - the union, work and family. The book examines how and why women embark on trade union careers, the social processes which shape women's gender and union identities and the combined influences of union/work/family contexts on the trajectory of women's union careers. Additionally, the book offers a historical overview of the development of women's trade union education and separate organizing, with original analysis and historical data.

The Trade Union Woman

The Trade Union Woman
Title The Trade Union Woman PDF eBook
Author Alice Henry
Publisher
Total Pages 358
Release 1915
Genre Labor unions
ISBN

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The book examines the history of women's labor organization and the relationship of working-class women to the campaign for woman suffrage.

Women and the American Labor Movement

Women and the American Labor Movement
Title Women and the American Labor Movement PDF eBook
Author Philip Sheldon Foner
Publisher
Total Pages 638
Release 1982
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN

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The World of Women's Trade Unionism

The World of Women's Trade Unionism
Title The World of Women's Trade Unionism PDF eBook
Author Norbert C. Soldon
Publisher Praeger
Total Pages 300
Release 1985-11-14
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN

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This book is a timely contribution to the study of the impact of trade unionism on women in the work force and how women have exercised power within trade unions. This collection of essays contains brief yet comprehensive histories of women's trade union movements in many of the principal industrial nations of the world--Britain, France, Germany, Sweden, Japan, Argentina, Italy, and the United States. The authors survey the impact of the cult of true womanhood on the growth of trade unionism. Each author analyzes the relationship between early women's trade unions and guilds, identifies the important leaders, and explains how ideologies affected the expansion of trade unions. Among other subjects treated are the movement's relationship to the feminist movement, the effects of economic depression and rationalization of industry, women's attitudes toward protective legislation and political action, and the effect of the women's liberation movement of the 1960s and 1970s. Finally, the authors assess the advances made as the result of equal-pay legislation and progress in the areas of training, promotion, safety, child-care, maternity leave, and reentry into the work force.

The Necessity of Organization

The Necessity of Organization
Title The Necessity of Organization PDF eBook
Author Kathleen B. Nutter
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 232
Release 2019-05-24
Genre History
ISBN 1317733789

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The Necessity of Organization describes Mary Kenney O'Sullivan's struggle to improve labor conditions through trade unionism. Appointed the first woman organizer for the American Federation of Labor in 1892, she went on to be a co-founder of the Women's Trade Union League, formed in 1903 as a cross-class alliance of women workers and their middle- and upper-class allies. The possibilities and limits of trade unionism for women, given the class and gender constraints of the period, are the focus of this book.

Women at Work

Women at Work
Title Women at Work PDF eBook
Author Mary Agnes Hamilton
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 119
Release 2016-12-19
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 1351986228

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This book, first published in 1941, is concerned to relate the argument for Trade Unionism to the needs of women who work, whether in their homes or outside them. It is, in part, a historical analysis of the inter-war years, and it also prefigures the changes to women’s working conditions brought about by the two World Wars. War necessitated the mass employment of women, and Trade Union action had greatly improved the position of the woman war-worker of 1941 compared to a quarter century previously. This invaluable book examines that Trade Union action.

Women Workers and the Trade Union Movement

Women Workers and the Trade Union Movement
Title Women Workers and the Trade Union Movement PDF eBook
Author Sarah Boston
Publisher London : Davis-Poynter
Total Pages 338
Release 1980
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN

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