Academic literature on the topic 'International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union. Local 262'

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Journal articles on the topic "International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union. Local 262"

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Greenwald, Michael L. "Actors as Activists: The Theatre Arts Committee Cabaret, 1938–1941." Theatre Research International 20, no. 1 (1995): 19–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0307883300006994.

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Given the omnipresence of performers of all political stripes speaking for a variety of causes and candidates, it is difficult to remember a time when artist-activists were not an integral part of America's theatrical landscape. Indeed, under David Douglass's leadership, the American Company (formerly the Hallam Company) assuaged Puritan fears about the presence of ‘theatricals’ in staid eighteenth-century New England by performing benefits for local causes, thereby injecting its work with a social purpose. Throughout its history the American theatre has used performance as a propaganda weapon
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Battle, Andy. "On the Auction Block: The Garment Industry and the Deindustrialization of New York City." International Labor and Working-Class History, October 20, 2022, 1–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0147547922000059.

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Abstract Several important studies of New York City's fiscal crisis of the 1970s identify the city's deindustrialization as a key component. The flight of manufacturers from New York fostered a racialized unemployment crisis while eroding the city's tax base, undermining its ability to meet increasing demands for social services, creating incentives for policymakers to focus on real estate development as the motor of the city's political economy, and weakening the institutions, especially labor unions, that had served as bulwarks of the city's unique (by American standards) brand of municipal
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Books on the topic "International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union. Local 262"

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Linder, Doris H. ILGWU leader Jennie Matyas (1895-1988): From New York Local 25 to the San Francisco ILGWU and the General Executive Board. Doris H. Linder, 2006.

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teacher, Bagchee Nandini, ed. Triangle Waist Company. Nandini Bagchee, 2017.

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Phillips, Lisa. Getting beyond Racial, Ethnic, Religious, and Skill-Based Divisions. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037320.003.0003.

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This chapter illustrates how Local 65, at the time of its Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) affiliation, was predominantly Jewish and had organized people at all skill levels in small wholesale shops on the Lower East Side. In 1937 and 1938, the union began to target people who worked in “dead end” jobs, before branching out to other industries in Midtown, Uptown, Brooklyn, and the Bronx. Their goal is to bring low-wage male and female workers—including blacks, more Jews, and immigrants—into the union. The strategy put the union at odds with others in the city, particularly the Amalga
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