History of Labour in the United States

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Beard Books, 1918 - 652 páginas

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Conditions Philosophies Movements Free land 4 The suffrage
3
THE GREAT UPHEAVAL 18841886
13
THE POLITICAL UPHEAVAL 18861887
18
and syndicalism 15 Politics 17 Intellectuals
19
CHAPTER I
25
CHAPTER II
31
hibition of wage regulation 85 Separate journeymen societies 86 Non
87
neymans standard of life 104 Skilled workers organised in selfde
88
CHAPTER II
357
the union
378
Strikes for higher wages elsewhere 399 The Philadelphia
399
CHAPTER IV
424
bour
436
weavers
452
APPENDICES
472
CHAPTER I
487

CHAPTER IV
108
CHAPTER V
138
CHAPTER VI
153
CHAPTER I
169
CHAPTER II
185
CHAPTER III
231
CHAPTER IV
285
CHAPTER V
302
Hours of labour
324
mocracy
331
in cigar making 343 The situation in the printing industry 343
335
CHAPTER II
493
brings Fourierism to America 497 Activities of Brisbane 497 Bris
504
Need for banking reform
510
Warrens time stores 511 Becks ticket exchange 511 Weitlings oppo
519
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS FROM 1896 II
521
Effect of free land upon wages 527 Evans and Walsh
522
CHAPTER IV
536
CHAPTER V
547
CHAPTER VI
564
CHAPTER VII
575
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Página 27 - The sum total of these relations of production constitutes the economic structure of society — the real foundation, on which rises a legal and political superstructure and to which correspond definite forms of social consciousness.
Página 4 - The condition which seems to distinguish most clearly the history of labour in America from its history in other countries is the wide expanse of free land. As long as the poor and industrious can escape from the conditions which render them subject to other classes, so long do they refrain from that aggression on the property rights or political power of others, which is the symptom of a

Acerca del autor (1918)

John R. Commons was an American economist, educator, and social investigator who believed strongly in the ideal of human equality. He is regarded as an institutionalist because of his interest in how institutions including trade unions, governments, and businesses evolved and interacted in a capitalistic system. As a labor economist, he developed a theory of labor struggle in which the collective actions of unions would lead to human betterment without the dire consequences of a Marxist revolution. Commons studied at Oberlin College and Johns Hopkins University. His interest in real-world institutions began when he joined the typographers' union as a student. Later, while teaching at Wesleyan, he often discussed current issues with his students and took them on field trips to examine issues firsthand. Commons took a chair of sociology at Syracuse University, where he developed the theory that owners of private property use their power to encroach on the rights and welfare of others. The wealthy benefactors at Syracuse, uncomfortable with this analysis, withdrew their financial support for the chair. Commons then spent several years working on various government commissions before he joined the faculty of the University of Wisconsin in 1904. There, in conjunction with his students, he published his classic 11-volume Documentary History of American Industrial Society (1910). It was followed by his best-known work, The History of Labor in the United States (1918), which chronicled the role of unions working for equality of the "economic classes" of workers and owners.

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