click to view more

Organizing Workers in the Shadow of Slavery: Global Inequality, Racial Boundaries, and the Rise of U

by Organizing Workers in the Shadow of Slavery: Global Inequality, Racial Boundaries, and the Rise of Unions in American and British Capitalism, 1870-192

$37.96

add to favourite
  • Only 2 left in Stock - order soon.
  • FREE DELIVERY by Monday, May 05, 2025
  • 24/24 Online
  • Yes High Speed
  • Yes Protection
Last update:

Description

An original analysis of the relationship between slavery and the labor movement in the late-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

During the rise of the labor movement in the late nineteenth century, why were American workers unable to organize inclusive trade unions like those formed by their counterparts in the United Kingdom? Comparing American and British capitalism in the port cities of Baltimore and Liverpool and the steel cities of Pittsburgh and Sheffield, Rudi Batzell reveals that the answer lies in the legacies of slavery and entrenched structures of racial inequality. Strikebreaking succeeded more often in the United States because landless Black Americans were, out of economic desperation, more likely to become scabs and fracture the class solidarity of any union movement. Batzell shows, in short, how racism was and is deeply connected to class, migration, and capitalism in a global economy marked by slavery and empire. In emphasizing the geography of economic inequality, this book offers new clarity on the late-nineteenth-century successes and failures of working-class formation. More broadly, Organizing Workers in the Shadow of Slavery makes it clear that the pursuit of justice today will require sustained economic reparations for slavery and colonialism.

Last updated on

Product Details

  • Apr 29, 2025 Pub Date:
  • 9780226838786 ISBN-13:
  • 0226838781 ISBN-10:
  • English Language