LaborHistory, Vol. 41, No. 4, 2000

Labor HistoryB ibliography, 1999

PETERMEYER FILARDO*

TheBibliography is organizedinto the followingtwelve sections: I.Theoriesof the AmericanLabor Movement/WorkingClass; II. Cross-PeriodStudies and Surveys; III.Periodsof Development; IV.Labor and Political Action/TheState, Labor and Radicalism; V. Women; VI.Immigration, Ethnicity, and MinorityGroups; VII.City, State, &RegionalLabor Movements/WorkingClass; VIII.Industries, Occupations, and Trades; IX.Comparative; X.Related/Thematic Works; XI.Marxology; XII.Archival, Reference& Bibliography, Professional,Non -PrintFormats/ Media, NewSerials. Note: Itemsfrom earlier years which werenot previously includedin the Bibliography will now be indexedin the appropriate section. [Compiler’sannotations are italicized within {brackets}]

I.THEORIESOF THEAMERICAN LABOR MOVEMENT/WORKINGCLASS [3] [Alsocontains theoretical/historiographical worksdiscussing the labor movement/working classper se] McIlroy,John and Alan Campbell, ªStill settingthe pace? Labour history, industrial relationsand the history ofpostwar tradeunionism,º Labour HistoryReview, 64:2 [99], 179± 199. ( based upon British experience ) Nomura, Tatsuro, ªClass and ethnicityin Americanhistory: studiesof American labor and immigration historiesin Japan,ºJapanese Journal ofAmerican Studies, 8, May [97],3± 15. Walsh, Margaret,ª North Americanlabour history: recenttrends,º Labour HistoryReview, 63:3 [98], 381± 386.

II. CROSS-PERIODSTUDIES AND SURVEYS[34] [A.Overviews, B. Through 1945,C. Post -1945] A.OVERVIEWS [8] Balkan, Sule, ªSocial insuranceprograms and compensating wagedifferentials in the UnitedStates,º DAI, 59[99], 3135A, DA9901661.

*PeterMeyer Filardo isArchivist ofthe Tamiment InstituteLibrary, NewYork University.Comments and submissions arealways welcome,via email (peter.®[email protected]), fax(212± 995± 4070), or via snail mail (Tamiment InstituteLibraryÐ NYU, 70Washington Square South, NewYork, NY10012±1091, U.S.A.).

ISSN 0023-656Xprint/ ISSN1469 -9702online/ 00/040465±36 Ó 2000Taylor & Francis Ltd on behalfof The Tamiment Institute DOI:10.1080/00236560020007108 466 P.M.Filardo

Gordon, Colin, ªThelost cityof solidarity: metropolitan unionism in historical perspective,ºPolitics &Society, 27:4[99], 561± 585. Liazos, TheodoreChristos, ªBiglabor: GeorgeMeany and the making ofthe AFL± CIO, 1894±1955,º DAI, 60[99], 1727A, DA9929617. { biography} Montgomery,David, ªDignity and democracy:America ’spreeminentlabor historian looks back at what the labor movement has wroughtover the courseof the 20th century,ºNew Labor Forum, 5[99],7± 19. Schultze, GeorgeEdward, ªAstudy ofthe in¯uence of the Catholic Church on union organizing:a historical review,Los Angeles in the 1990s,and futurerelations,º DAI, 60[99], 454A, DA9919105. Taylor, Jason and GeorgeSelgin, ªBy ourbootstraps: originsand effectsof the high -wagedoctrine and the ,ºJournal ofLabor Research,20 [99], 447± 462. Wilkinson, Patrick, ªThesel¯ ess and the helpless: materialist originsof the U.S. welfarestate (review essay).ºFeminist Studies, 25:3[99], 571± 597. Winders,Bill, ªTheroller coaster of class con¯ ict: class segments, mass mobilization, and voterturnout in the U.S., 1840±1996,º Social Forces,77:8 [99], 833± 860.

B.THROUGH1945 [13] {See also: IV-AÐ Goldberg,M.; VI -C-IÐ Maloney, T.;IX -FÐ Collomp,C.; Hansen, H. } Atack, Jeremyand FredBatcman, ªU.S. historical statistics: nineteenth -centuryU.S. industrial development through the eyesof the Censusof Manufactures,º Historical Methods, 32,Fall [99], 177± 188. Boldasty, GeraldJ., ªTheeconomics of working -classjournalism: the E.W. Scripps newspaperchain, 1878±1908.º Journalism History, 25:1[99], 3± 12. { Serving aworking -class readership } Clymer, JeforyAlan, ªPropaganda by the deed:plotting terrorismin Americanliterature and culture, 1870±1920.º DAI, 59[99], 2977A± 2978A, DA9904028. { Includes discussion ofHaymarket, Jack London, IdaB .Wells } Dalrymple, Scott, ªJohn Hay ’srevenge:anti -labor novels, 1880±1905,º Business and Economic History, 28:2[99], 133± 142. Fones-Wolf, Elizabeth and KenFones -Wolf, ªLendinga hand to labor: James Myersand the Federal Council ofChurches, 1926±1947,º Church History, 68,March [99], 62± 86. Guterl,Matthew Pratt, ªThenew race consciousness: race, nation, and empirein Americanculture, 1910±1925,º Journal ofWorld History, 10:2[99], 307± 352. { African-American andIrish American nationalist movements andanti -imperialistradicalism, including discussion ofHubert H.Harrison,an African-American socialist } Kaufman, BruceE., ªNonunion employeerepresentation in the pre -WagnerAct years: a reassess - ment,ºJournal ofLabor Research,20:1 [99], 9± 29. Oakes, Leslie,et al., ªLabor ’schangingresponses to management rhetorics:a study in accounting - based incentiveplans duringthe ®rsthalf ofthe 20th century,ºAccounting Historians Journal, 26, December[99], 133± 162. O’Rourke, BridgetKathleen, ª Meaningsand practicesof literacy in urban settlementcommunities: Chicago’sHull House,1890± 1940,º DAI, 59[99], 4420A, DA9914531. { Analyzes oraland written literacy narrativesof working -class men andwomen } Scranton, Philip, ªMultiple industrializations: urban manufacturingdevelopment in the American Midwest,1880± 1925,º Journal ofDesign History, 12:1[99], 45± 63. { Comparesseveral cities, and stresses the importance ofnon -Fordistspecialty manufacturing } Stone-Gordon,Tammy Lee,ª Fifty -centsybils: occultworkers and the symbolic marketplacein the urban U.S., 1850±1930,º DAI, 59[99], 3863A, DA9909370. Weiss,Thomas, ªEstimatesof white and nonwhite gainfulworkers in the UnitedStates by agegroup, race,and sex:decennial census years, 1800± 1900,º Historical Methods, 32,Winter [99], 21± 35. Wenzler,John Eric,ª Transcendentaleconomics: the quest to harmonize economicand moral law in nineteenth-centuryAmerican social thought,º DAI, 59[99], 3620A, DA9905398.

C. POST-1945 [14] {See also: XIÐ Philion, S.} ÐÐ,ªTrendsin workerpay: what do the data show?ºAmerican Economic Review, 89:2 [99], 34± 51. LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 467

Addison, John T.and McKinleyL. Blackburn, ªMinimum wagesand poverty,ºIndustrial and Labor Relations Review,52 [99], 393± 409. Boyd, LawrenceW., ªWorkers ’ compensation reformpast and present:an analysis ofissues and changesin bene®ts,º Labor Studies Journal, 24:2[99], 45± 62. { 1970s±1990s focus } Davis, John B., ªIstradeliberalization an important causeof increasing U.S. wageinequality?º Review ofSocial Economy, 57:4[99], 488± 506. Diana, Antonio, ªChangesin the Americanworkplace: casestudies of the introductionof employee participation in fourmanufacturing plants,º DAI, 60[99], 1785A, DA9930158. John, Chinhui, ªWageinequality and demand forskill: evidencefrom ® vedecades { 1940± 1990},º Industrialand Labor Relations Review,53 [99], 424± 443. Logue,John and Jacquelyn S.Yates, ªWorkerownership Americanstyle: pluralism, participation and performance,ºEconomic and IndustrialDemocracy, 20:2 [99], 225± 252. Nilsson, EricA., ªForeigntrade and innovation in domesticlabor relations,ºReview of Radical Political Economics,31:3 [99], 20± 29. Nilsson, EricA., ªTrendsin compensation forproduction workers,ºReview of Radical Political Economics,31:4 [99], 133± 163. Perline,Martin M., ªUnionviews of managerial prerogatives revisited: the prospectsfor labor± manage - ment cooperation,ºJournal ofLabor Research,20:1 [99], 147± 154. { 1968,1997 data } Stoltzfus, EmilieSue, ªCitizen, mother, worker:public provision ofchild care,1945± 1965,º DAI, 60 [99],526A, DA9917987. Western,Bruce and KatherineBeckett, ª Howunregulated is the U.S. labor market? Thepenal system as alabor market institution,ºAmerican Journal ofSociology, 104,January [99],1030± 1060. {1980s±1990s } Woods, Ronald Oak, ªAlongitudinal analysis ofthe portrayal ofdownsizing in the business press,º DAI, 60[99], 1815A± 1816A, DA9933026. Wright, Gavin, ªThecivil rights revolution as economichistory,º Journal ofEconomic History, 59[99], 267± 289.

III.PERIODSOF DEVELOPMENT [113] A.THECOLONIAL PERIODTHROUGH THE CIVILWAR (to 1865) [13] {See also:VII Ð GeorgiaÐ Ramey,D.; New York,NY Ð Glynn, T.;North Carolina Ð Forret,J.; VIII Ð MaritimeÐ Vickers, D.} Alpert, Cady and KyleD. Kauffman, ªTheeconomics of the Uniondraft: institutional failureand governmentmanipulation ofthe labor market duringthe Civil War,ºEssays in Economicand BusinessHistory, 18[99], 89± 108. Barnes, L.Diane, ªSouthern artisans, organization, and the riseof a market economy in antebellum Petersburg,ºVirginia Magazine of History and Biography, 107:2[99], 159± 188. Battani, Marshall, ªOrganizational ®elds, cultural® elds, and the artworlds: the earlyeffort to make photographs and make photographers in the 19th -centuryUSA,º Media Culture & Society, 21:5 [99],601± 626. Beardslee,Karen E., ªThrough slaveculture ’slenscomes the abundant source:Harriet A. Jacobs ’s Incidents in the Lifeof a Slave Girl {1861},ºMelus, 24:1 [99], 37± 58. Bezis-Selfa, John, ªAtaleof two ironworks: slavery, freelabor, work, and resistancein the Early Republic,ºWilliam &MaryQuarterly, 56:4 [99], 677± 700. Brighton, Stephen A.and Paul E.Reckner,ª Freefrom all vicioushabits: archeologicalperspectives on classcon¯ ict and the rhetoricof temperance,º Historical Archaeology, 33:1[99], 63± 86. { New YorkCity &Lowell Massachusetts, 1850sfocus } Brodine, VirginiaWarner, ª Excavatingcanal workers ’ lives: the researchodyssey ofa novelist,ºLabor ’s Heritage,10:2 [99], 58± 75. Cronin, MaryM., ªRede®ning woman ’ssphere:New England ’santebellum femaletextile operatives ’ magazinesand the responseto the cultof true womanhood,º Journalism History, 25:1[99], 13± 25. Ely, Carol Alexandra,ª Domesticeconomies: household textilemanufacture and the family in Mas - sachusetts, 1620±1830,º DAI, 60[99], 1291A, DA9927221. Henderson,Carol E., ªBorderlands: the criticalmatrix of caste, class, and colorin Incidents in the Life ofa Slave Girl {1861},ºLegacy, a Journal ofAmerican Women Writers,16:1 [99], 49± 58. 468 P.M.Filardo

Husband, Julie, ªThewhite slaveof the north: Lowellmill women and the reproductionof free labor,º Legacy,a Journal ofAmerican Women Writers,16:1 [99], 11± 21. Kelleher,Mary Alice, ª Laboringunder a misconception: writingabout workand writingas workin fourantebellum NewEngland authors,º DAI, 60[99], 1559A± 1560A, DA9930197. { Thoreau, Stowe, Hawthorne, Alcott } Quigley, William P., ªRumblings ofreform: Northern poor relieflegislation in Antebellum America, 1820±1860,º Capital UniversityLaw Review, 26:4 [97], 739± 774.

B.THEERAOFUPHEAVAL/RISE& FALL OFTHEKNIGHTSOF LABOR (1865±1896) [5] {See also:VII Ð CaliforniaÐ San Francisco Ð Gardner,M.; Illinois Ð ChicagoÐ Mirola,W.; Illinois Ð GalesburgÐ Lause, M.;New York,NY Ð Gish,C.; VIII Ð Transportation Ð RailÐ WilliamsÐ Searle, J.} Dyer,Dawn Michele,ª Combating the ®ery¯ ood: the Woman ’sChristian TemperanceUnion ’s approach to labor and ,ºDAI, 59[99], 4259A, DA9912919. Haydu, Jeffrey,ª Counteraction frames:employer repertoires and the union menacein the late nineteenthcentury,º Social Problems, 46:3[99], 313± 331. Haydu, Jeffrey,ª Two logicsof class formation? Collectiveidentities of proprietary employers, 1880± 1900.ºPolitics & Society, 27:4[99], 507± 527. Lichtenstein,Alex, ª Was the emancipated slavea proletarian?ºReviews in AmericanHistory, 26[98], 124± 145. Willard, Carla, ªNation ’smaid: realizingJemima, segregationpolicy, and the dark sideof consumer progress,1880± 96,º Rethinking Marxism,10:4 [98], 1± 33.

C.THETRIUMPH OF THEAFL TOU.S.ENTRY INTO WORLD WARI (1896±1917) [6] {See also: IV-BÐ Hudson, M.,VII Ð CaliforniaÐ San Francisco Ð Perry,H.; VIII Ð Entertainment Ð SportsÐ Humphreys,L. } Bjork, Katherine,ª Incorporatingan empire: fromderegulating labor to regulatingleisure in Cuba, PuertoRico, Hawaii, and the Philippines, 1898±1909,º DAI, 59[99], 4258A± 4259A, DA9910843. Cappucci, Paul Raphael, ªThelasting impact ofthe dusty ®ght: the 1913Paterson silk strikeand William Carlos Williams ’ development as an Americanpoet,º DAI, 60[99], 739A± 740A, DA9921945. Clymer, JefforyA., ªThis ®rm ofmen -killers:Jack London and the business ofterrorism,º MFS ModernFiction Studies, 45:4[99], 905± 931. { Re hisnovel, The Assassination Bureau, written 1910, published1963, about a®ctional group ofanti -capitalist terrorists. Inspired,in part,by the trialof Big Bill Haywood et al.for the 1905murder of Frank Steunenberg, formerGovernor ofIdaho } Mitchell,Michele, ª TheBlack man ’sburden: AfricanAmericans, imperialism, and notions ofracial manhood, 1890±1910,º International Review of Social History, 44:Supplement 7[99],77± 99. Shulman, Stuart W., ªTheProgressive Era farm press:a primeron aneglectedsource of journalism history,ºJournalism History, 25:1[99], 26± 35. Triece,Mary E., ªThepractical true woman: reconcilingwomen and workin popular mail -order magazines,1900± 1920,º Critical Studies in MassCommunication, 16, March[99], 42± 62.

D.WORLD WARI AND THEAFTERMATH(1917± 1929) [1] {See also: VI-AÐ Ngai, M.;VII Ð IllinoisÐ Spring® eldÐ Gatyas, K.} Nack, David. ªTheAmerican Federation of Labor confrontsrevolution in Russia and earlySoviet government,1905 to 1928:origins of labor ’sCold War,ºDAI, 60[99], 534A, DA9918339.

E.THEGREATDEPRESSION, THENEW DEAL, AND THERISE OF THECIO(1929± 1941) [7] {See also: V-BÐ Suzik,J.; VII Ð CaliforniaÐ Piper,C. Hanne, D.;North Carolina Ð BurlingtonÐ Salmond, J.;Oklahoma Ð Bailey, J.;Virginia Ð Lynchburg, Cole,J.; VIII Ð TextileÐ Whalen,R.: XII -D-Bartlett, L. } DeCoste,Damon Marcel,ª Crisisand dissent: literaryagency in philosophy and ®ction,ºDAI, 59[99], LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 469

2979A,DANQ29920. { John Dos Passos ’ U.S.A.,James T. Farrell ’sStuds Lonigan, RichardWright ’s Native Son} Dorrill, LisaKathryn, ªPicturingthe dirty thirties: paintings and prints ofthe Dust Bowl,ºDAI, 59 [99],2756A, DA9903055. Jacobs, Meg,ª Democracy ’sthird estate:New Deal politics and the constructionof a consuming public,ºInternational Labor and Working -Class History, 55,Spring [99],27± 51. Malamud, Deborah C., ªEngineeringthe middle classes:class line -drawingin NewDeal hours legislation,ºMichigan Law Review, 96, Aug. [98],2212± 2321. Quinn, JeanneFollansbee, ªDemocraticaesthetics: the discourseof social justice in Americanlitera - ture,criticism, and philosophy ofthe 1930s,ºDAI, 60[99], 2030A, DA9933970. { includes Mike Gold,Richard Wright } Renshaw, Patrick, ªWas therea Keynesianeconomy in the USA between1933 and 1945?ºJournal of Contemporary History, 34:3[99], 337± 364. St. Antoine, TheodoreJ., ªHowthe WagnerAct came to be: aprospectus,ºMichigan Law Review, 96, Aug. [98],2201± 2211.

F.WORLD WARII TOTHEMERGEROF THEAFL &CIO(1941±1955) [9] {See also: VI-C-4Ð O’Neill, C.;VII Ð FloridaÐ MiamiÐ Mohl,R.; Missouri Ð St. LouisÐ Kersten, A.; WisconsinÐ Loew, P.;VIII Ð Professions Ð Reisch, M.} Chamberlain, Charles DevereIII, ªManpower, regionand race:mobilizing Southern workersfor World WarTwo, 1939±1948,º DAI, 60[99], 2190A, DA9934699. Cooper, Patriciaand Ruth Oldenziel,ª Cherishedclassi® cations: bathrooms and the constructionof gender/raceon the Pennsylvania Railroad duringWorld War II,º Feminist Studies, 25:1[99], 7± 41. Hagarty, MarilynElizabeth, ªPatriots, prostitutes, patriotutes: the mobilization and controlof female sexualityin the UnitedStates duringWorld War II,º DAI, 59[99], 3939A, DA9911202. Hepler,Allison L.,ªAnd wewant steeltoes like the men: genderand occupational health duringWorld WarII,º Bulletin ofthe Historyof Medicine, 72, Winter [98], 689± 713. Kroeger,Brian J., ªThefoundations ofcollective action: tradeunions, civilrights policy, and organizationalbehavior,º DAI, 60[99], 1745A, DA9910422. Light, JenniferS., ªWhen computerswere women,º Technology and Culture, 40:3[99], 455± 483. {Women mathematicians in defense work(computers, ballistics).Their jobs were classi® edas clerical } Mazyck,Robin Denise,ª Timefor action: WorldWar II through the eyesof an African -American cartoonist,ºMAI, 37[99], 1059, MA1393542. { Oliver(Ollie) Wendell Harrington ’s WWII adven- ture strip.® veGray.Harrington ’sworkappeared regularly andfor many yearsin the Communist Party ’s Daily Workerand its successors } Raphael, Chris, ªUtopia out ofplace: Studs’ Place,popular frontculture, and the blacklist in Chicago television,ºQuarterly Review of Film &Video,16:3± 4 [99],253± 270. { Discusses this TVshow, 1949±52, set in aChicago working class tavern. The proprietor ’scharacterwas playedby Studs Terkel } Roarty, Robert C., ªLunchtimefollies: food, fun, and propaganda in America ’swartimeworkplace,º Journal ofAmerican Drama and Theatre,11, Winter[99], 29± 48.

G.FROMTHE AFL -CIOTOTHEEND OFTHECOLD WAR(1955± 1991) [19] [1.Historically -Oriented;2. Industrial Relations/Other] 1.Historically -OrientedStudies & Surveys [7] {See also: VI-C-1Ð Richards,Y.; VII Ð Massachusetts Ð WorcesterÐ Cohen, B.;VIII Ð AutomobileÐ Baltakis,A.; VIII Ð TextileÐ Minchin, T.} Atterbury, Paul Harvey, ªArenewedlobbying effortby organizedlabor to amend the National Labor Relations Act: acasestudy ofhow the 1981decision by the Reaganadministration to ®reand replacestriking air traf® c controllersresulted in arenewedlobbying effortby organizedlabor to amend the National Labor Relations Act,ºMAI, 37[99], 1349, MA1394163. Bussel, Robert, ªSouthern organizingin the post -civilrights era: the caseof S. Lichtenberg,ºIndustrial and Labor Relations Review,52:4 [99], 528± 538. { A Georgia-basedcurtain manufacturer } Cobble, Dorothy Sue, ªAspontaneous loss ofenthusiasm: workplacefeminism and the transformation 470 P.M.Filardo

of women’sservicejobs in the 1970s,ºInternational Labor and Working -Class History, 56[99], 23± 44. Hamilton, KonradMark, ªFrom equal opportunity to af®rmative action: ahistory ofthe Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 1965±1980,º DAI, 59[99], 3169A, DA9901518. Ludwig,Erik, ª Closing on the plantation: coalition building and the roleof black women ’s in DukeUniversity labor disputes, 1965±1968,º Feminist Studies, 25:1[99], 79± 94. { AFSCME Local 77Ð service workers } MacLean,Nancy, ªThehidden history ofaf® rmative action; workingwomen ’sstrugglesin the 1970s and the genderof class,º Feminist Studies, 25:1[99], 43± 78. Yates, JoAnne, ªThestructuring of early computer use in lifeinsurance,º Journal ofDesign History, 12:1[99], 5± 24. { Metropolitan LifeInsurance Company,New YorkCity, 1950s; some discussion of laborissues }

2a.Industrial Relations/Other Studies& Surveys Ð TheLabor Movement[3] {See also:VIII Ð ServiceÐ Christiansen, L. } Freeman, Richard B. and MorrisM. Kleiner,ª Do unions make enterprisesinsolvent?º Industrial and Labor Relations Review,52: [99], 510± 527. { 1983±1990 data } Wunnava, Phanidra V.and Noga O.Peled,ª Unionwage premiums by genderand race:evidence from PSID 1980±1992,º Journal ofLabor Research,20:3 [99], 415± 423. Wunnava, Phanidra V.and Bradley T.Ewing,ª Union±nonunion differentialsand establishment size: evidencefrom the NLSY,ºJournal ofLabor Research,20 [99], 177± 183. { 1990 data}

2b.Industrial Relations/Other Studies& Surveys Ð Other [9] Alyan, Nafez,ª Therole of capital intensity and technologicalusage in upgradingskills in the U.S. labor market,ºTechnological Forecasting and Social Change, 61[99], 59± 74. { 1970s±1980s data } Dencker,John Charles, ªWorkforcereductions and the intra -organizationalmobility response:an analysis ofpromotion and turnoverin alargeUS ®rm, 1967±1993,º DAI, 59[99], 3979A, DA9910056. Feenstra,Robert C.and GordonH. Hanson, ªTheimpact ofoutsourcing and high -technologycapital on wages:estimates for the UnitedStates, 1979±1990,º Quarterly Journal ofEconomics, 114 [99], 869± 905. Gardecki,Rosella Maria, ªThelabor marketeffects of maternity mandates,ºDAI, 59[99], 2651A, DA9839641. Haider,Steven John, ªEconometricstudies of long -runearnings inequality,º DAI, 59[99], 2651A± 2652A,DA9840549. Parent,Daniel, ªMethodsof pay and earnings:a longitudinal analysis,ºIndustrial and Labor Relations Review,53:1 [99], 71± 86. { 1988±1990 data } Partridge,Mark D., ªDo minimum wagehikes reduceemployment? Evidencefrom the low -wage retail sector,ºJournal ofLabor Research,20:3 [99], 393± 413. { 1980s data} Partridge,Mark D. and Jamie S.Partridge,ª Do minimum wagehikes raiseU.S. longterm unemploy - ment? Some evidenceusing state minimum wagerates,º Regional Studies, 33:8[99], 713± 726. {1980s data} Polsky, Daniel, ªChanging consequencesof job separation in the UnitedStates,º Industrial and Labor Relations Review,52:4 [99], 565± 580. { 1976±81, 1986± 91 data }

H.RECENT/CURRENTDEVELOPMENTS [53] 1a.Studies & Surveys Ð TheLabor Movement[13] {See also: IV-AÐ Gottschalk, M.;VII Ð WisconsinÐ MilwaukeeÐ Eimer,S.; VIII Ð Construction Ð Byrd, B.; IX-FÐ Russo, J. ÐÐ,ªOrganizingfor keeps: building atwenty -®rstcentury labor movement ¼specialconference issue,ºLabor Studies Journal, 24:1[99], 1± 122. { Kate Bronfenbrenner, guest editor.Conference held April30± May 2, 1998, San Jose. California,and jointly sponsored bythe University andCollege Labor Education Association andthe AFL -CIOEducation Department. See articles throughout bibliography } LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 471

Castillo, Floridama, ªAttitudes and beliefsof U.S. union workersin selected{ Midwestern}statestoward foreignand futureimplications forU.S. foreignpolicy,º DAI, 59[99], 2650A, DA9839619. Conrow, Teresaand Linda Delp, ªTeachingorganizing through workers ’ experiences,ºLabor Studies Journal, 24:1[99], 42± 57. DeFreitas,Gregory, ª Anewunion movement forthe neweconomy: aconversationwith JocAlvarez {AFL±CIO Northeast Regional Director },ºRegional Labor Review,1, Spring/Summer [99],13± 18. Featherstone,Liza, ª It ’sbusiness, man! Unionsand socially responsiblecorporations,º Dissent, Fall [99],53± 57. { Includes discussion ofunion organizing at Ben &Jerry ’s} Eisenscher,Michael, ª Leadershipdevelopment and organizing:for what kind ofunion?º Labor Studies Journal, 24:2[99], 3± 28. { Includes responses byGregory M.Saltzman andPhilip LaParte, pp. 22± 28 } Ferraris,Claire L., ªAmericanlabor: acrisisof vision. Acriticalcommunication study ofthe discourse themesof capitalism, technology, and democracy,ºDAI, 59[99], 4010A± 4011A, DA9913146. Gattiker,Urs E. and Dan Paulson, ªUnionsand newof® cer technology,º Relations Industrielles/ IndustrialRelations, 54:2[99], 245± 276. Jean, Victoria,ª Factorsin union participation: aresearchproject exploring { Michael} Lerner’s surplus powerlessnessapproach,º MAI, 37[99], 144, MAMQ30484. Mericle,Kenneth and Dong -OneKim, ªFrom job -based pay to skill -based pay in unionizedestablish - ments: athree -plant comparative analysis,ºRelations Industrielles/IndustrialRelations, 54:3[99], 549± 580. Moody, Kim, ªIsU.S. labor changingas fastas the workplace?ºLabour/ LeTravail, 43[99], 217± 227. {Review essay, discussing: Mantsios, Gregory,ed., A New labormovement fora new century, 1998,and Nissen, Bruce, ed.,Unions andworkplace reorganization, 1997 } Swinney, Dan, ªStrategiclessons for labor fromcandyland,º New Labor Forum, 5[99],68± 77. { at the BrachCandy Company, Austin, TX } Weil, David, ªAremandated health and safetycommittees substitutes foror supplements to labor unions?ºIndustrial and Labor Relations Review,52 [99], 339± 360.

1b.Studies & Surveys Ð Other [15] {See also: X-CÐ Wood, S.} Boushey, HeatherM. ªThesocial structures of insulation: theoryand evidenceon the relationship betweenunemployment, wages,discrimination, and socialpolicy,º DAI, 59[99], 3135A± 3136A, DA9900462. Dumond, J.Michael,et al., ªWagedifferentials across labor marketsand workers;does cost of living matter?ºEconomic Inquiry, 37:4[99], 577± 598. { 1985±95 data } Elliot, James R., ªSocial isolation and labor marketinsulation: networkand neighbourhood effectson less-educatedworkers,º Sociological Quarterly, 40:2 [99], 199± 216. Gordon, Avery, ªThework of corporate culture: diversity management,º Social Text,44 [99], 3± 30. Hill, Dana Carol Davis, ªFringebene® ts and workersatisfaction: amultivariate analysis ofthe sources and consequencesof satisfaction with non -wagejob rewards,ºDAI, 59[99], 3979A± 3980A, DA9908604. Lautsch, BrendaA., ªBridginglabor markets: agroundedtheory of ,º DAI, 59[99], 3980A.[Copies available exclusivelyfrom MIT Libraries,ph/ fax617± 253± 5668/ 1690.] Lee,Dwight R.and Ronald S.Warren,Jr., ªMandatedhealth insuranceand the low -wage labor market,ºJournal ofLabor Research,20 [99], 505± 515. Long,James E.,ªUpdatedestimates of the wagemobility ofminimum wageworkers,º Journal ofLabor Research,20 [99], 493± 503. Luce,Stephanie and Robert Pollin, ªCan U.S. citiesafford living wage programs?º Review of Radical Political Economics,31:1 [99], 16± 53. Mills, JeffreyA. etal., ªRecentminimum wageincreases and the minimum wagelabor force,ºJournal ofLabor Research,20 [99], 479± 492. Pavetti, Ladonna and Nancy Wemmerus, ªFrom awelfarecheck to apaycheck: creatinga newsocial contract.ºJournal ofLabor Research,20 [99], 517± 537. Resheff,Yonatan, etal., ªEmployee involvement programs: should unions getinvolved?º Journal of Labor Research,20 [99], 557± 569. Townsend, Anthony M.and Dane M.Partridge,ª Revisitingmulti -tierwage structures: equity, employment mobility, and tiereffects,º Journal ofLabor Research,20 [99],606± 619. { Study of a retail foodindustry laborunion local } 472 P.M.Filardo

Tuski, Donald Leo,ª Folk constructionsof a plant closing,ºDAI, 59[99],3879A, DA9909377. { Motor Wheel Corporation,Lansing, Michigan, 1995 } Wright, David W.and EarlWysong, ªFamily friendlyworkplace bene® ts: policy mirage,organizational contexts,and workerpower,º Critical Sociology, 24:3[98Ð published1999 ],244±276. { Includes discussion ofthe 1993Family and Medical Leave Act }

2.Popular and Opinion Serials/Works[25] ÐÐ,ªActivists want union democracyon Washington stateballot,º Labor Notes, 243,June [99],6. Bacon, David, ªLabor ’scrucialstake in the ®ghtfor immigrant rights,ºWorkingUSA, 2:3[98], 36± 46. Blackwell, AngelaGlover and Kalima Rose. ªOvercomingthe obstacles: forgingeffective labor -com- munity alliances,ºNew Labor Forum, 5[99],59± 67. Bolc, William, ªReligionand labor: reawakeningthe alliance,ºWorkingUSA, 2:4[98], 42± 49. Bruno, Robert and GordonSchulz, ªHowcreative tactics help labor win ®rstcontracts. Psychologists in Chicago ¼ºWorkingUSA, 2:4[98], 60± 67. Dougherty, Laurie,ª Betweenthe deviland the deepblue sea: workersin the global environment,º Dollars and Sense,224 [99], 19± 23. Hahnel, Robin, ªGoingto greetthe WTOin Seattle,ºZ Magazine,12:11 [99], 7± 12. Hill, Herbert,ª Lichtenstein ’s®ctionsrevisited: race and the newlabor history,ºNew Politics, 26[99], 148± 163. Kelley,Robin D.G., ªBuilding bridges:the challengeof organized labor in communities ofcolor,º NewLabor Forum, 5[99],42± 58. Kusnet,David, ªThenew labor movement and the politics ofliving standards: alook back at the AFL-CIO’s `Americaneeds a raise ’ campaign ¼,ºWorkingUSA, 2:3[98], 26± 35. Lichtenstein,Nelson, ªWalterReuther in black and white: arejoinderto HerbertHill,º New Politics, 26[99], 133± 147. Mantsios, Gregory,ª What doeslabor stand for?ºWorkingUSA, 2:4[98], 24± 40. Merri®eld, Andy, ªClass formation, capital accumulation, and the downsizingof America,º Monthly Review,51:5 [99], 32± 43. Mishel, Larry,et al., ªDismantling the myth ofthe `new’ Americaneconomy,º WorkingUSA, 2:3[98], 8± 24. Moody, Kim, ªIsbureaucracy best for unions?º New Politics, 26[99], 126± 132. Ness,Immanuel, ªTheroad to union cities:labor seeksto transformthe cultureand structureof central labor councils,ºWorkingUSA, 2:4[99], 78± 86. Nissen, Bruce,ª Alliancesacross the border:U.S. labor in the eraof globalization,º WorkingUSA, 3:1 [98],43± 55. Parker,Mike, ª Skilled workin an eraof management -by-stress.Corporate strategies for work organization, such as leanproduction, demand alabor responseaimed at greaterskills, betterjobs, and morepower for union members,ºWorkingUSA, 2:3[98], 56± 72. { Contains asidebar,pp. 60±61, on the 1939UAW tool anddie strike } Reyes,Teo® lo, ªEmpowermentzones becoming the maquiladoras ofthe North,ºLabor Notes, 246, September [99],8± 9. St. Clair, Jeffrey,ª Seattlediary: it ’sagas, gas, gas,ºNew Left Review, 238 [99], 81± 96. Samuels, Sheldon W., ªGenetictesting in the workplace: acastesystem forworkers?º WorkingUSA 3:1 [99],83± 92. Shepard, Edwardand Thomas Clifton, ªDrugtesting: does it reallyimprove labor productivity?º WorkingUSA, 2:4[98], 68± 76. Steinberg,Stephen, ªConfrontingthe misuse ofclass -based af®rmative action,ºNew Politics, 26[99], 28± 32. Tabb, William K.,ªLabor and the imperialism of® nance,ºMonthly Review,51:5 [99], 1± 13. Unterweger,Peter, ª Which way forthe global economy,ºWorkingUSA, 3:1[99], 69± 81.

IV.LABOR &POLITICALACTION/ THESTATE,LABOR &RADICALISM[65] A.POLITICALACTION/ THESTATE [32] {See also:III -AÐ Quigley, W.;III -EÐ Malamud,D., St. Antoine, T.;III -G-IÐ Atterbury, P.;VII Ð CaliforniaÐ Grossinger, K.:VII Ð CaliforniaÐ San Francisco Ð Perry,H.; VII Ð MichiganÐ DetroilÐ Lones. T.; VIIÐ New YorkÐ Kim, J.; VIIÐ VirginiaÐ Haines, D.;VIII Ð Public Sector Ð Slater, J.;VIII Ð LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 473

Transportation Ð TruckingÐ Belzar,M.; VIII Ð Agriculture Ð Gordon,R.; IX -EÐ Dannin, E.;IX -FÐ EuropeÐ Collomp,C.; IX -GÐ United Kingdom Ð Wood, S.}

ÐÐ,ªDepartments: the law at work,ºMonthly Labor Review{ Bureau ofLabor Statistics }, 122: 1,4,7,10 [99],46± 49, 43± 46, 42± 44, 33± 36. Adams, Roy J., ªCollectivebargaining: the Rodney Danger®eld of human rights,ºLabor LawJournal, Fall [99],204± 209. Aronowitz, Stanley, ªFrom the ashes ofthe old: labor needsa newpolitical strategy,ºWorking USA, 2:3[98], 73± 83. Balser, Deborah B., ªImplementingnew employment law: acontestedterrain,º DAI, 59[99], 4540A, DA9914607.{ Title Iofthe Americans WithDisabilities Act } Bellace,Janice R., ªILOfundamental rightsat workand freedomof association,º Labor LawJournal, Fall [99],191± 196. Bible, Jon D., ªAsecondgeneration of sexual harassment law; the Supreme Court rewritesthe rules forthe workplace,ºLabor LawJournal, Summer [99],115± 129. Bodam, MatthewM., ªCongressionalin¯ uence on labor policy: how Congresshas in¯uenced out - comeswithout changingthe law,ºLabor LawJournal, Fall [99],223± 229. Castagnera,James Ottavio and Cory R.Fine, ªUnionsalting since Town &Country :an analysis ofnew industry strategies,ºLabor LawJournal, Winter[99], 264± 274. Clark, Paul F., ªUsingmembers ’ duesfor political purposes: the `paycheck protection ’ movement,º Journal ofLabor Research,20:3 [99], 329± 342. CutchnerGershenfeld, Joel, ªThesocial contract at the bargainingtable: evidencefrom a surveyof labor and management negotiators,ºLabor LawJournal, Fall [99],214± 222. Dannin, EllenJ., ªUsingthe NLRB as aresource,ºLabor Studies Journal, 24:3[99], 38± 53. Delancy, John T., etal., ªEvolutionary politics? Uniondifferences and political activitiesin the 1990s,º Journal ofLabor Research,20:3 [99], 277± 295. Glanzer,Michael J., ªCorporateprotections: the mechanicsof building aunion earlywarning system in collectivebargaining agreements,º Labor LawJournal, Winter[99], 289± 308. { to alert unions to mergers,etc. andtheir implications } Goldberg,Michael J., ªLaw, labor, and the mainstream press:Labor Day commentarieson labor and employment law, 1882±1935,º Labor Lawyer,15, Summer [99],93± 149. Gottschalk, Marie,ª Themissing millions: organizedlabor, business, and the defeatof Clinton ’s Health SecurityAct,º Journal ofHealth Politics, Policy and Law, 24:3[99], 489± 529. Gray,George R., etal., ªCooperative provisions in collectivebargaining agreements,º Monthly Labor Review,122:1 [99], 29± 45. Gross,James A., ªAhuman rightsperspective on U.S. labor relationslaw,º Labor LawJournal, Fall [99],197± 203. Hat® eld, Donald E.and KentF. Murrmann, ªDiversi®cation and win ratein NLRB certi®cation elections,ºJournal ofLabor Research,20 [99], 539± 555. Jelf, GregoryS., ªWhy workersreject their unions in NLRB -supervisedelections: three empirical studies,ºDAI, 59[99], 4472A, DA9914500. Kazin,Michael, ª Doingwhat wecan: the limits and achievementsof American labor politics,ºNew Labor Forum, 5[99],21± 31. Lambert, J.Bartlett, ªTheright to strikein Americanpolitical development: labor, the state, and social policy,ºDAI, 60[99], 2210A, DA9910482. LeRoy, MichaelH. ªAreemployers constrained in the useof employee participation groupsby Section 8(a)(2) ofthe National Labor Relations Act?ºJournal ofLabor Research,20:1 [99], 53± 71. Lowery,Christina Marie,ª Protectionor equality? Afeministanalysis ofprotective labor legislationin UAWv. Johnson Controls, Inc.,ºMAI, 37[99], 522, MAI391947. Masters,Marick F. and Ray Jones, ªThehard and softsides of union political money,ºJournal of Labor Research,20:3 [99], 297± 327. Milanovic, Nikola Emmanuel, ªTheNorth AmericanAgreement of Labor Cooperation: atenuouslink betweentrade and labour standards?ºMAI, 37[99], MAMQ29449. Nelson, Richard R.ªState labor legislationenacted in 1998,ºMonthly Labor Review,122:1 [99], 3± 15. Reynolds, David, ªCoalition politics: insurgentunion political actionbuilds tiesbetween labor and the community,ºLabor Studies Journal, 24:3[99], 53± 75. Schiller, Reuel,E., ªFrom grouprights to individual liberties:post -warlabor law, liberalism, and the waningof union strength,ºBerkeley Journal ofEmployment &Labor Law, 20:1[99], 1± 73. 474 P.M.Filardo

Singh, Nikhil, ªIrritantsor apologists: areplyto MichaelKazin,º New Labor Forum, 5[99],32± 37. Sweeney,Sean, ªTheLabor Party: newpolitical architecture,ºNew Politics, 27[99], 53± 62. Wade, David R., ªTheexpanding workplace: telecommutingand legalliability underOSHA, ADA, and Workers’ Compensation,ºLabor LawJournal, Winter[99], 252± 263. Zachary, Mary -Kathryn, ªAt -will employeesand the Civil Rights Actof 1871: an expansion of remedies,ºLabor LawJournal, Summer [99],130± 137. { Its current relevance }

B.RADICALISM[33] {See also: II-BÐ Guterl, M.;III -BÐ Dyer, D.;III -FÐ Mazyck,R.; III -G-IÐ Richards,Y.; V -AÐ Seigfried, C.: VI-BÐ Michaels,T.; VI -C-IÐ Kelley, R.;VI -C-2Ð Choi,J.; VII Ð KansasÐ Entz, G.,Grossardt, T. (re: IWW): VIIIÐ AutomobileÐ Wypijewski, J.;IX -EÐ Shor,F. (re:IWW); XII -BÐ Booker, M.,Fried,A., Paatten, J.,Trahair,R.; XII -DÐ Apel,D., Porton, R.,Beachley, D. } Aronowitz, Stanley, ªTowardradicalism: the death and rebirthof the AmericanLeft,º Social Text, 44[95],59± 95. Bennett,Scott H., ªPaci®sm, not passivism: the WarResisters League and radicalpaci® sm, nonviolent directaction, and the Americanizationof Gandhi, 1915±1963,º DAI, 59[99], 3166A, DA9900632.{ Includes discussion ofthe socialist paci® st philosophy ofWRL founder Jessie Wallace Hughan, andthe role ofthe WRLin the Socialist Partydebate on the Spanish CivilWar } Berland, Oscar,ª Theemergence of the Communist perspectiveon the NegroQuestion in America: 1919±1931 (part one),ºScience & Society, 63:4[99], 411± 432. Bosc, Erica,ª Threebrave men: an examination ofthree attorneys who representedthe Hollywood Nineteenin the HouseUn -AmericanActivities Committee Hearingsin 1947and the conse - quencesthey faced,ºUCLA Entertainment Law Review, 6 [99],321± 365. Brown, KathleenA., ªThesavagely fathered and un -motheredworld of the Communist Party, U.S.A.: feminism, maternalism, and MotherBloor,º Feminist Studies, 25:3[99], 537± 570. Cha-Jua, Sundiata Keita,ª C.L.R. James, Blackness, and the making ofa Neo -Marxistdiasporan historiography,ºNature, Society, and Thought, 11:1[98], 53± 89. { PublishedApril, 1999 }. Cooncy, TerryA., ªNewreadings on the Old Left,ºAmerican Literary History, 11:1[99], 142± 165. Ellis, James Walter,ª BenShahn ’sSunday Paintings { 1940}:explanations { including political } for his shift fromsocial realism to personal realism,ºMAI, 37[99], 1271, MA1394225. Finger,Barry, ªWheredid Paul Robeson Stand? AmisleadingPBS documentary,ºNew Politics, 27 [99],128± 134. Foley, Barbara, ªRalph Ellison as proletarian journalist,ºScience & Society, 62:4[99], 537± 556. Foster,John Bellamy, ªRemarks on Paul Sweezyon the occasionof his receiptof the Veblen±Com - mons award,ºMonthly Review,51:4 [99], 39± 44. Gneuhs, Geoffrey,ª Dorothy Day: acontemporarysaint?º Culturefront, 7, Fall [98],35± 38. Hudson, Mark, ªRevolutionary socialistsin AlleghenyCounty: the Pittsburgh reds,1911± 1914,º Against the Current,81 [99], 26± 30. LaBotz, Daniel, ªSlackers:American war resisters and Communists in Mexico,1917± 1927,º DAI, 59 [99],4261A, DA9913024. Lott, Eric,ª Boomer liberalism,ºTransition: an InternationalReview, 78 [99], 24± 44. { ªAsB lack Power erupted at the close ofthe 1960s,white activists went ducking forcover. Thirty yearslater, the whites have their own movement Ð avastcentrist conspiracy, talking bigabout unionism andshilling forClintonº } McKible,Adam David, ªThespace and placeof modernism: the littlemagazine in NewYork,º DAI, 59[99], 2506A± 2507A, DA9840960. { Discusses: The Liberator.The Messenger. The Little Review. The Dial} Moglen,Seth, ªJohn Dos Passos and the crisisof American socialism: astudy in the politics ofliterary form,ºDAI, 60[99], 1562A, DA9931331. { hisU.S.A. trilogy } Neve,Brian, ªRedHollywood,º Historical Journal ofFilm, Radio and Television,19:1 [99], 129± 135. {Review essay, discussing this compilation ®lm,written anddirected by Thom Andersen andNoel Burch } Newsinger,John, ªTheAmerican connection: George Orwell, `literaryTrotskyism ’ and the NewYork intellectuals,ºLabour HistoryReview, 64: 1 [99],23± 43. Pfaelzer,Jean, ªSalt ofthe Earth { ® lm, 1953}:women, class, and the utopian imagination,ºLegacy, a Journal ofAmerican Women Writers,16:1 [99], 120± 131. Phelps, Christopher, ªIntroduction:a socialistmagazine in the AmericanCentury,º Monthly Review, 51:1 [99],1± 30. { to aspecial issue commemorating the 50thanniversary ofMonthly Review } LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 475

Raasch-Gilman, Elizabeth, ªSisterhood in the revolution: the Holmessisters in the Socialist Workers ’ Party,ºMinnesota History, 56[99], 358± 375. Saab, AliceJoan, ªPainting the town red(and white and blue): artand politics in 1930sNew York City,ºDAI, 60[99], 1634A, DA9930250. Sellars, Nigel,ª With foldedarms? Orwith squirrelguns? The IWW and the GreenCorn rebellion,º Chroniclesof Oklahoma, 77,Summer [99],150± 169. Scott, Jonathan Paul, ªTheblood ofothers: classstruggle and popular culturein the writingof LangstonHughes,º DAI, 59[99], 2988A, DA9900334. Smith, FletcherCharles, ªClyde Johnson, AmericanCommunist: his lifein the labor movement,ºDAI, 60[99], 2197A, DA9932782. { b.1908,includes: City College, NYC,Alabama Sharecroppers Union, UCAPAWA,Oil WorkersIndustrial Union (CIO),Carpenters union } Stevens, Michael,ª Apolitical partnership: the marriageof Victor and MetaBerger,º Milwaukee History, 19, Autumn [96],95± 104. Storch, Randi Jill, ªShades ofred: the Communist Party and Chicago ’sworkers,1928± 1939,º DAI, 59 [99].4263A± 4264A, DA9912388. Tabb, William K., ªProgressiveGlobalism: challengingthe audacity ofcapital,º Monthly Review,50:8 [99], 1± 10. Warren,Frank A., ªA¯awedhistory ofthe popular front,ºNew Politics, 26[99], 112± 125. { Discusses Michael Denning ’s TheCultural Front, 1996} Young, Cynthia Ann, ªSoul power: culturalradicalism and the formation ofa USThird Worldleft,º DAI, 60[99], 1636A, DA9931005. { 1960s±70s; includes discussion ofLocal 1199,and of Harold Cruse} Webster,James K., ªThepolitical economy ofJames Burnham: an alternate{ class-based}approach to realism,ºMAI, 37[99], 808, MA1393161. Yuan, Ji, ªW.E.B. DuBois and his socialistthought,º DAI, 59[99], 2670A, DA9838555.

V.WOMEN,MEN, GAY &LESBIAN [35] [Readersare encouraged tosee sections VII &VIII,respectively, for relatedworks with geographical and industrial foci] A.WOMEN[22] {See also: II-AÐ Willanson, P.;II -BÐ StoneÐ Gordon,T.; II -CÐ Stoltzfus, E.;III -AÐ Cronin, M.,Hender - son, C.,Husband,J.: III -CÐ Trioce. M.:III -FÐ Cooper,P., Hagarty,M., Hepler,A., Light, J.; III -G-1Ð Cobble,D., Ludwig, E., MacLean, N.; III -G-2bÐ Gardecla,R.; IV -AÐ Lowery, C.;IV -BÐ Brown, K., Gneuhs, G.,Pfaelzer, J., Raasch -Gilman,E.; VI -BÐ Berke, N.,Bernard, R., DeVault, I.;VI -C-IÐ Carson, J.,Childress,P., Coleman,J., Richards, Y.; VI -C-3-Bateman, R.;VII Ð California-San Francisco -Gardner, M.;New YorkCity -Wall,D.; Washington -Qazi,J.; VIII Ð Automobile-Lambourne,K.; Clothing Ð Chin,M., Zehern, M.;Construction -Bryd,B.; Coal -Savage,C.; Education -Higher-Aparicio,F.; Entertainment -Tucker, S.;Health Care -Wolf,J.; Libraries -Hansen, D.;Public Sector -Yamagata,H.; Transportation -Air-Shreve,A.; Transportation -TruckingÐ Moon, S.; IX-AÐ Allen, M.,Parr,J.; XII -B- Ranta, J.} ÐÐ,ªSpecial issue:discourses of women and class,ºLegacy, a Journal ofAmerican Women Writers, 16:1[99], 1± 133. { see selected articles throughout } Bettie,Julie, ªClass dismissed? Roseanneand the changingface of working -classiconography,º Social Text,45 [95], 125± 149. Bhandari, Shailesh Ram, ªGendercomposition and relativewages in the U.S. labor market,ºDAI, 59 [99],3580A± 3581A, DA9905336. Bradford, MaryAnn, ªLavinia Lloyd Dock: an activist in nursingand socialreform,º DAI, 59[99], 3987A±3988A, DA9911166. Dublin, Thomas, ª Women work,and family {Scott &Tilly, 1978 }:the viewfrom the UnitedStates,º Journal ofWomen ’sHistory, 11:3[99], 17± 21. Ford, Nancy Gentile,ª TheOld Country ServiceSchool: gender,class, and identity and the YWCA ’s trainingof immigrant women in international socialwelfare philosophy, 1919,ºPeace and Change, 23,Oct. [98],440± 454. Fosu, Augustin Kwasi, ªCost ofliving and labour forceparticipation: marriedwomen in urban labor markets,ºJournal ofLabor Research,20 [99], 219± 232. 476 P.M.Filardo

Haynie, Bana L.and BridgetK. Gorman, ªAgenderedcontext of opportunity: determinantsof poverty acrossurban and rurallabor markets,ºSociological Quarterly, 40:2 [99], 177± 197. Hotchkiss, Julie L.and Robert E.Moore,ª On the evidenceof a workingspouse penalty in the manageriallabor market,ºIndustrial and Labor Relations Review,53 [99], 410± 423. Kahn, Peggyand Linda M.Blum, ªNot just 9to 5: the problems ofnonstandard workinghours,º WorkingUSA, 2:4[98], 50± 59. Kiter,Edwards and MargieLynn, ªRural workingclass women ’saccountsof household and family labor,ºDAI, 60[99], 1347A, DA9927675. { Mid-Atlantic trailerpark residents } Knupfer,Anne Meis, ª Professionalizingprobation workin Chicago, 1900±1930,º Social Service Review,73, December [99], 478± 495. Lawler,Steph, ªGettingout and gettingaway: women ’snarrativesof class mobility,º Feminist Review, 63[99], 3± 24. Leary,Andrea Marie, ª To point to asolution: acollectionof Charlotte PerkinsGilman ’slectures,º DAI, 60[99], 424A, DA9918880. Little,Deborah L., ªIndependentworkers, dependable mothers: discourse,resistance, and AFDC workfareprograms,º Social Politics, 6[99],151± 202. Mandell, Betty Reid, ªFalling through the safetynet,º New Politics, 26[99], 10± 27. Mills, Erin,ª Rinseand spit: genderidentity and the everydaywork life of dental assistants,º MAI, 37 [99],1375, MAMQ36836. Sass, Tim R. and JenniferL. Troyer,ª Af® rmative action, political representation,unions, and female policeemployment,º Journal ofLabor Research,20 [99], 571± 587. Seigfried,Charlene Haddock, ªSocializingJohn Dewey:Jane Addams and John Dewey,ºPhilosophy of the Social Sciences,29:2 [99], 207± 230. { the contributions ofAddams and the women ofthe Hull House Settlement to pragmatisttheory ¼arelargely responsible forits emancipatory emphasis } Tilly, Chris and Randy Albelda, ªTowarda strategyfor women ’seconomicequality,º New Politics, 27 [99],83± 93. Tisdale, Judy Jones, ªPositiveimages of capitalism in westernAmerican literature: working women in selectedworks by Willa Cather, MaryHunter Austin, and GertudeAtherton,º DAI, 60[99], 2032A±2033A, DA9934627. Turner,Paaige Kelle, ª Labor as work: the discursiveconstruction of midwifery,º DAI, 59[99], 2781A, DA9900276. Weeden,Kim A., ªRevisitingoccupational sexsegregation in the UnitedStates, 1910±1990: results from a log-linearapproach,º Demography, 35,Nov. [98],475± 487.

B. MEN [4] ÐÐ,ªSpecial issue:boys and theirtoys,º Men and Masculinities,2:2 [99], 115± 246. { Workplace/focus± see selected articles, below } Meyer,Stephen, ªWork, play, and power: masculineculture on the automotive shop¯oor, 1930±1960,º Menand Masculinities,2:2 [99], 115± 134. Quan-Wickham, Nancy, ªRereadingman ’sconquestof nature: skill, myths, and the historical construc - tion ofmasculinity in Westernextractive industries { mining oil, lumber },ºMan and Masculinities, 2:2[99], 135± 151. Suzik, JeffreyRyan, ªTheCCC boy and the changingsocial idea of manliness,º Man and Masculini - ties,2:2 [99], 152± 179.

C.GAY &LESBIAN [8] ÐÐ,ªOut front:lesbians, gays, and the strugglefor workplace rights,º Social Text,61 [99], 1± 118. {thematic portion ofissue Ð see articles below } Cohen, Cathy J., ªWhat is this movement doingto my politics?ºSocial Text,61 [99], 111± 118. Gold, Tami, ªMakingout at work,ºSocial Text,61 [99], 89± 110. Hollibaugh, Amber and Nikhil Pal Singh, ªSexuality, labor, and the newtrade unionism: aconver - sation betweenAmber Hollibaugh and Nikhil Pal Singh,ºSocial Text,61 [99], 73± 88. Krupat, Kitty, ªOut oflabor ’sdark age:sexual politics comesto the workplace,ºSocial Text,61 [99], 9± 29. Krupat, Kittyand PatrickMcCreery [modcrators], ª Homophobia, labor ’snewfrontier? A discussion with fourlabor leaders,ºSocial Text,61 [99], 59± 72. LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 477

McCreery,Patrick, ªBeyond gay: `deviant’ sexand the politics ofthe ENDA workplace {ENDA 5 proposedfederal Employment Non -Discrimination Act },ºSocial Text,61 [99], 39± 58. Sweeney,John J., ªThegrowing alliance between gay and union activists,ºSocial Text,61 [99],31± 38.

VI.IMMIGRATION/ MIGRATION,ETHNICITY, MINORITY GROUPS [38] [Readersare encouraged tosee sections VII &VIII,respectively, for relatedworks with geographical and industrial foci] A.IMMIGRATION/MIGRATION[5] {See also:1± Nomura, T.; III -H-2Ð Bacon, D.;V± A -Ford,N.; VII Ð Great BasinÐ Carson,S.; VIII Ð Transportation Ð RailÐ McGarvie,M.; VIII Ð FoodPreparation & Service Ð Grey, M.; IX-EÐ Kim, J.; IX-FÐ Collomp,C. (France &U.S.),Strikwerda, C. } ÐÐ,ªForum: immigration historyÐ assessingthe ®eld,ºJournal ofAmerican Ethnic History, 18:4 [99],40± 166. { thematic portion ofissue } ÐÐ,ªTransformations: immigration and immigration researchin the UnitedStates,º American Behavioral Scientist{ thematic ofissue },42:3[99], 1253± 1474. Choy, CatherineCeniza, ªTheexport of womanpower: atransnational history ofFilipino nurse migration to the UnitedStates,º DAI, 59[99], 3612A, DA9906094. Ngai, MaeM., ªThearchitecture of race in Americanimmigration law: areexaminationof the Immigration Actof 1924,º Journal ofAmerican History, 86:1[99], 67± 92. Grosfoguel,Ramon, ªPuertoRican labor migration to the UnitedStates: modes ofincorporation, coloniality, and identities,ºReview Fernand BraudelCenter, 22:4 [99], 503± 521.

B.ETHNICITY[8] {See also: II-BÐ Guteri, M.(Irish -Americans);V -AÐ Zehren, M.(Italian -Americans);VII Ð FloridaÐ MiamiÐ Mohl,R. (Jews): VII Ð OhioÐ ToledoÐ Borden,T. (Polish -Americans):XII -BÐ Patten, J.(Jews) } Bender,David, ªAhero¼ forthe weak: work, consumption, and the enfeebledJewish worker, 1881±1924.º International Labor and Working -Class History, 56[99], 1± 22. Berke,Nancy, ªEthnicity, class, and genderin Lola Ridge ’sTheGhetto,º Legacy, a Journal of AmericanWomen Writers,16:1 [99], 70± 81. { published1918, a long poemabout Jewish immigrant life} Bernard,Richard Blair, ªGender,ethnicity, locallabor market structure:emergent ethnicity and women ofItalian ancestryin the UnitedStates in 1940,ºDAI, 59[99], 3655A, DA9906050. Bertelini,Giorgio, ª Shipwreckedspectators: Italy ’simmigrants at the movies in NewYork, 1906± 1916,ºVelvet Light Trap, 44[99], 39± 53. DeVault, IleenA., ªNarrativesserially constructed and lived: ethnicityin cross -genderstrikes, 1887± 1903,ºInternational Review of Social History, 44:Supplement 7[99],33± 52. Michaels,Tony E., ªSocialist politics and the making ofYiddish culturein NewYork City, 1890± 1923,ºDAI, 59[99], 3940A, DA9908825. Soyer, Daniel, ªDocumentingimmigrant livesat an immigrant institution: Yivo ’sautobiography contestof 1942,º Jewish Social Studies, 5:3[99], 218± 243. Weiler,N. Sue, ªState ofthe union: abriefhistory ofJewish involvement in Chicago ’slabor movement from1886,º Western States Jewish History, 31, Fall [98],66± 70.

C-1.MINORITY GROUPS: AFRICAN -AMERICANS[14] {See also: II-BÐ Guterl, M.;II -CÐ Wright,G.; III -BÐ Lichtenstein, A.,Willard, C.; III -AÐ Beardslee,K., Henderson, C.;III -CÐ Mitchell, M;III -FÐ Chamberlain,C., Cooper,P., Kroeger,B.; III -G-1Ð Hamilton, K.,Ludwig,E.; IV -BÐ Berland,O., Cha -Jua, S.,Foley, B.,Scott, J.,Yuan, J.;VII Ð FloridaÐ MiamiÐ Mohl,R.; Louisiana Ð New OrleansÐ Regis, H.;Maryland -BaltimoreÐ Lancaster, R;North Carolina Ð Forret,J.; Oregon Ð PortlandÐ Stroud, E.;Wisconsin Ð Loew, P.;VIII -Construction Ð Thieblot, A.;VIII - EducationÐ HigherÐ Aparicio,F.; VIII -FoodÐ Horowits, R.;VIII -MusicÐ Dickerson, L.;VIII -Public SectorÐ King, D.;VIII -TextileÐ Minchin, T.} Adams, Jessica,ª Localcolor: the Southern plantation in popular culture,ºCultural Critique, 42, Spring [99],163± 187. 478 P.M.Filardo

Carson, JenniferLynn, ªYour sistersof a darkerhue: African -Americanwomen workersand the Women’sTradeUnion League,º MAI, 37[99], 104, MAMQ30662. Childress, Paulette,ª Awomanist socialprotest tradition in twentiethcentury African -American literature:® ctionby MaritaBomer, Ann Petty, Dorothy West,and GwendolynBrooks,º DAI, 59 [99],4425A± 4426A, DA9915642. { ¼writing in protest ofrace Ð , classÐ , and sex-basedoppression ofworking class blackwomen .. } Chima, FelixO. and William D.Wharton, ªAfricanAmericans and the workplace: overviewof persistentdiscrimination,º Journal ofIntergroup Relations, 26:1[99], 18± 34. Coleman, Janice, ªMeditatingupon means: the black seamstressin nineteenth -centuryAmerican literature,ºDAI, 60[99], 740A± 741A, DA9921126. Fairlie, Robert W., and William A.Sundstrom, ªTheemergence, persistence, and arecentwidening of the racialunemployment gap,ºIndustrial and Labor Relations, 52[99], 252± 270. Grant,David Matthew, ªAfrican -Americanlabor marketin corporationin aglobal city{ Los Angeles},º DAI, 59[99], 3656A, DA9906767. Kelley,Robin D.G. and BetsyEsch, ªBlack likeMao: RedChin and Black revolution,ºSouls: a CriticalJournal ofBlack Politics, Culture, and Society, 1:4[99], 6± 41. McGowan,Todd, ª Theireyes were watching God and the evolution ofcapitalism,º Melus, 24:1 [99], 109± 128. Maloney, Thomas N., ªPersonnelpolicy and racialinequality in the pre -WorldWar II North,ºJournal ofInterdisciplinary History, 30:2[99], 235± 258. Mullins, Paul R., ªRaceand the genteelconsumer: class and African -Americanconsumption, 1850± 1930,ºHistorical Archaeology, 33:1[99], 22± 38. Nicholls, David G., ªMigrantlabor, folklore,and resistancein Hurston ’sPolk Country { Florida}: reframing Mules andMen {1935},ºAfrican American Review, 33:3 [99], 467± 479. { lumber camp} Richards, Yevette,ª Race,gender, and anticommunism in the international labor movement: the Pan-Africanconnections of Maida Springer,ºJournal ofWomen ’sHistory, 11:2[99], 35± 59. {African-American of®cial ofthe AFL -CIO’sInternational AffairsDepartment, whose development was in¯uenced byher association with Lovestoneites in the ILGWU } Sanchez-Jankowski, Martin, ªTheconcentration of African -Americanpoverty and the dispersalof the workingclass: an ethnographic study ofthree inner -cityareas,º International Journal ofUrban and RegionalResearch, 23:4 [99], 619± 637. { Detroit, LosAngeles, New YorkCity }

C-2.MINORITY GROUPS: ASIAN -AMERICANS[3] {See also:VII Ð CaliforniaÐ San Francisco Ð Gardner,M.; Hawaii Ð Jung, M.} Choi, JenniferJung Hee,ª At the marginsof the Asian Americanpolitical experience:the lifeof Grace LeeBoggs,º Amerasia Journal, 25:2[99], 18± 40. Tung, Charlene, ªThesocial reproductive labor ofFilipina transmigrantworkers in Southern Califor - nia: caringfor those who provide elderlycare,º DAI, 60[99], 1795A, DA9932112. Zhi, Liping, ªNo needto rush: the Chinese, placermining, and the Westernenvironment,º Montana: the Magazineof Western History, 49:3[99], 42± 57.

C-3.MINORITY GROUPS: LATIN & CARIBBEAN -AMERICANS[6] {See also:VII Ð CaliforniaÐ Menjivar,C.; VII Ð CaliforniaÐ Los AngelesÐ Soldatenko, M.,Waldinger,R.; VIIÐ TexasÐ San AntonioÐ Bauder,H.; VIII Ð ClothingÐ Scott, G.:VIII Ð Food Preparation& Service Ð Grey, M.} Bateman, Robyn Lyn, ªMexicanAmerican female wages: a comparative approach,ºDAI, 59[99], 45437A,DA9915202. Davis, Mike,ª Magicalurbanism: Latinos reinventthe USbig city,ºNew Left Review, 234 [99], 3± 43. DeGenova,Nicholas Paul, ªWorkingthe boundaries, making the difference:race and spacein Mexican Chicago,ºDAI, 60[99], 465A, DA9920160. Lipsitz, George,ª Worldcities and worldbeat: low -wagelabor and translational culture,ºPaci® c HistoricalReview, 68:2 [99], 213± 231. { LosAngeles andMiami } Marcz,Curtis, ªBrown: the politics ofworking -classChicano style,ºSocial Text,48 [96], 109± 132. Mora, MarieT., ªDid the Englishde® ciency earnings penalty changefor Hispanic men between1979 and 1989?ºSocial ScienceQuarterly, 79, Sept. [98],581± 594. LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 479

Wilson, Tamar Diana, ªAnti -immigrant sentimentand the processof settlement among Mexican migrantsto the UnitedStates: re¯ections on the recentwave of Mexican immigrant bashing,º Reviewof Radical Political Economics,31:2 [99], 1± 26.

C-4.MINORITY GROUPS: NATIVE AMERICANS [2] {See also:VII Ð WisconsinÐ Loew, P.;XII -B2Ð Magnaghi,R. } O’Neill, Colleen, ªThemaking ofthe Navajo worker:Navajo households, the Bureauof Indian Affairs, and off-reservationwage work, 1948±1960,º New Mexico Historical Review, 74:4 [99], 375± 405. Peters,Kurt M., ªContinuing identity: LagunaPueblo railroadersin Richmond, California,ºAmerican Indian Cultureand ResearchJournal, 22:4[98], 187± 198.

VII.CITY,STATE ®IONAL LABOR MOVEMENTS/WORKINGCLASS [76] [Readersare encouraged toseek related industrial entries Ð i.e.for California, seealso Section VIII,Agriculture] Arkansas [1] Moneyhon, Carl H., ªTheslave family in Arkansas,ºArkansas HistoricalQuarterly, 58:1, Spring [99], 24± 44.

Appalachia {See also:VIII Ð CoalÐ Savage, C.} California [8] Amenta, Edwin, etal. ªThestrategies and contextsof social protest: political mediation and the impact ofthe Townsendmovement in California,ºMobilization, 4:1[99], 1± 23. Cornford, Daniel, ªWeall livemore like brutes than humans: labor and capital in the goldrush,º California History, 77:4[99], 78± 104. { In this thematic, book -length issue, titled, AGolden State: mining andeconomic development in gold rushCalifornia, pp. 1± 318 } Hanne, Daniel, ªHam and eggs,left and right: the California scrippension initiatives of1938 and 1939,ºSouthern California Quarterly,80, Summer [98],183± 230. Heard,DeVera Helen Flanigan, ªTheCalifornia Foundation forthe Improvement ofEmployer± Em - ployeeRelations collectivebargaining process: perceptions of union presidentsand chiefpersonnel of®cers in selectedCalifornia school districts,ºDAI, 59[99], 4540A, DA9913986. Grossinger,Ken, ª Howlabor defeatedCalifornia ’sProposition 226,ºWorking USA, 2:3[98], 84± 90. Kim, Marlene,ª Inertiaand discrimination in the California civilservice,º Industrial Relations, 38[99], 46± 68. Menjivar, Cecilia, ªTheinteraction of work and gender:Central American immigrant women and employment in California,ºAmerican Behavioral Scientist, 42,Jan. [99],601± 627. Piper, CraigScott, ªNewDeal migratory labor camps in California, 1935±1941: three case studies,º DAI, 60[99], 1729A± 1730A, DA9930341.

CaliforniaÐ Los Angeles[7] {See also: II-AÐ Schultze, G.;VI -C-1Ð Grant,D.; VI -C-3Ð Lipsitz,G.; VIII Ð LibrarisÐ Hansen, D.; VIIIÐ Music-Dickerson, L. } Bauman, Robert Alan, ªRace,class and political power: the implementation ofthe waron poverty in LosAngeles,º DAI, 59[99], 2683A, DA9840758. { Discusses the Watts LaborCommunity Action Committee} Braxton-Brown, Jeremy, ªAn examination ofday labor hiringsites in LosAngeles, California,º MAI, 37[99], 1337, MA1394297. Donovan, John, ªAtaleof two strikes:the formation ofthe UnitedTeachers -LosAngeles and the Los Angelesteacher strikes of 1970 and 1979,ºSouthern California Quarterly,81, Fall [99],377± 396. Ellis, Markand Richard Wright, ªTheindustrial division oflabor among immigrants and internal migrantsto the LosAngeles economy,º International Migration Review, 33, Spring [99],26± 54. 480 P.M.Filardo

Nicolaides, BeckyM., ª `Wherethe workingman is welcomed ’: working-classsuburbs in LosAngeles, 1900±1940,º Paci® c HistoricalReview, 68:4 [99], 517± 559. Soldatenko, MariaAngelina, ªMadein the USA: Latinas/os?, garmentwork and ethniccon¯ ict in Los Angeles’ sweatshops,º Cultural Studies, 13:2[99], 319± 334. Waldinger,Roger, ª Not the promised city: LosAngeles and its immigrants,ºPaci® c HistoricalReview, 68:2[99], 253± 272. { Latinos}

CaliforniaÐ Northern [1] Self, Robert Owen, ªShifting groundin metropolitan America: class, race,and powerin Oakland and the EastBay, 1945±1977,º DAI, 59[99], 3619A, DA9907956.

CaliforniaÐ San Francisco [3] Gardner,Martha Mabie, ªWorkingon white womanhood: white workingwomen in the San Francisco anti-Chinesemovement, 1877±1890,º Journal ofSocial History, 33:1[99], 73± 95. Issel,William and James Collins, ªTheCatholic Church and organizedlabor in San Francisco, 1932±1958,º Records of the AmericanCatholic HistoricalSociety of Philadelphia, 109[99], 81± 112. Perry,Hayden, ªTheUnion Labor Party ofSan Francisco:labor politics in action, 1901±11,º Against the Current,81 [99], 31± 34.

CaliforniaÐ Southern {See: VI-C2Ð Tung, C.}

Florida {See also: VI-C-1Ð Nicholls, D.;VIII Ð EducationÐ Makowsky,M. }

FloridaÐ Miami [1] {See also: VI-C-3Ð Lipsitz, G.} Mohl, Raymond A., ªSouth ofthe South? Jews, Blacks and the civilrights movement in Miami, 1945±1960,º Journal ofAmerican Ethnic History, 18:2[99], 3± 36. { Includes some discussion ofthe interrelated roles ofthe CIO,the CivilRights Congress, andthe Communist Party }

Georgia [1] Ramey, Diana L., ªAplaceof our own: labor, family and community among femaleslaves in Piedmont and TidewaterGeorgia, 1820± 1860,º DAI, 59[99], 3618A, DA9906111.

Great Basin [1] Carson, Scott Alan, ªTheperpetual emigratingfund: redemption servitudeand subsidizedmigration in America’sGreatBasin,º DAI, 59[99], 4241A, DA9911403.

Great Lakes {See: VIIIÐ Communications Ð Nissen, B.}

Hawaii [1] {See also:III -CÐ Bjork, K.} Jung, Moon-Kie,ª No whites, no Asians: race,Marxism, and Hawai ’i’spreemergentworking class,º Social ScienceHistory, 23:3[99], 357± 393. LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 481

IllinoisÐ Chicago [3] {See also: II-BÐ O’Rourke, B.;IV -BÐ Storch, R.;V -AÐ Knupfer,A.; VI -AÐ Weiler,N. (Jews); VI -C-3Ð DeGenova, N. } Cohen, Andrew:Wender, ª Thestruggle for order law, labor, and resistanceto the corporateideal in Chicago, 1900±1940,º DAI, 60[99], Z190A, DA9934037. { focus on role ofcraft workers and their unions} Mirola, William A., ªShorterhours and the Protestantsabbath: religiousframing and movement alliancesin late -nineteenth -centuryChicago,º Social ScienceHistory, 23:3[99], 395± 433. Wright, TerriMartin, ªAcommunity in agarden:the Pullman paradigm in Southern Illinois,ºJournal ofthe Illinois State HistoricalSociety, 91,Autumn [98],113± 132.

IllinoisÐ Galesburg [1] Lause,Mark A., ªThecruel striker war: raillabor &the broken symmetry ofGalesburg civic culture, 1877±1888,º Journal ofthe Illinois State HistoricalSociety, 91,Autumn [98],81± 112.

IlinoisÐ Spring® eld[1] Gatyas, Kenton,ª Spring® eld ’sgeneralstrike of 1917,º Journal ofIllinois History, 1, Autumn [98], 43± 56.

Iowa {See: VIIIÐ Food Preparation& Service Ð Zachry,M.; Transportation Ð RailÐ Williams-Searle, J.}

Kansas [2] Entz,Gary R., ªParadiseon the plains: the development ofcooperative alternatives in Kansas, 1850±1900,º DAI, 60[99], 1723A± 1724A, DA9930915. { English Workingmen ’sCooperative Colony (Llewellyn Castle),Zion Valley (Pennsylvania coal miners),Singleton Colony (Tennessee ex -slaves)} Grossardt,Theodore H., ªHarvestinghoboes: the 800mile picketline,º DAI, 60[99], 843A, DA9220608.{ repression ofIWW agricultural labororganizing in Central Kansas,1914 to 1919 }

Louisiana {See also:VIII Ð Wood-Fickle, J.}

LouisianaÐ NewOrleans [2] Ambrose, Edith Rosepha, ªArevolutionof hope: NewOrleans workers and theirunions, 1923±1939,º DAI, 59[99], 3609A, DA9906575. Regis,Helen A., ªSecondlines, minstrelsy, and the contestedlandscapes ofNew Orleans Afro -Creole festivals,ºCultural Anthropology, 14:4[99], 472± 504. { working class focus }

Maine [1] Carbonella, August, ªThereimagined community: the making and unmaking ofa localworking class in Jay/LivermoreFalls, Maine, 1900±1988,º DAI 59[99], 3519A. DA9908299. { paperworkers }

MarylandÐ Baltimore[1] {See also: V-AÐ Zehren, M.;VIII Ð ClothingÐ Zehren, M.} Lancaster,R. Kent,ª Almost chattel: the livesof indentured servants at Hampton± Northampton, Baltimore County,ºMaryland HistoricalMagazine, 94:3 [99], 341± 362. 482 P.M.Filardo

Massachusetts[2] {See also:III -AÐ Brighton, S.;VIII Ð ClothingÐ Juravich,T.; Maritime Ð Vickers, D.} Hanlan, James and BruceCohen, ªDo unto others: the GoldenRule Fund and organizedlabor in Worcester,Massachusetts,º Historical Journal ofMassachusetts, 27:1 [99], 46± 74. Huataniemi, Susan I., etal., ªMilltown mortality: consequencesof industrial growthin two nine - teenth-centuryNew England towns { Holyoke &Northampton, Massachusetts, 1850±1910 },º Social ScienceHistory, 21:1[99], 1± 39.

Massachusetts Ð Gloucester[1] Santos, MichaelWayne, ªClass and community in Gloucester:sources of anti -industrialism in the New England® shing town,ºAmerican Neptune, 59,Spring [99],115± 124.

Massachusetts Ð Worcester[1] Cohen, Bruceand James Hanlan, ªDo unto others: the GoldenRule Fund and organizedlabor in Worcester,Massachusetts, 1955± 1965,º Historical Journal ofMassachusetts 27:1 [99], 46± 74.

Michigan [1] {See also:III -H-1bÐ Tuski, D.} Leitner,Jonathan A., ªUpperMichigan ’scoppercountry and the political ecologyof copper, 1840s± 1930s,ºDAI, 59[99], 2746A, DA9829140.

MichiganÐ Detroit [1] {See also:VIII Ð AutomobileÐ Wypijewski, J. } Jones, Thomas Lloyd, ªLabor and politics: the Detroitmunicipal electionof 1937,º DAI, 60[99], 1725A,DA9929854. { UAW focus}

Midwest,The [1] {See also: II-BÐ Scranton, P.;III -H-1aÐ Castillo,F.; VIII Ð Communications Ð Nissen, B.} Margo,Robert A., ªRegionalwage gaps and the settlementof the Midwest,ºExplorations in Economic History, 36, April [99],128± 143.

Minnesota {See: IV-BÐ Raasch-Gilman, E.}

Missouri {See: XII-DÐ Savan, B.}

MissouriÐ St.Louis [1] Kersten,Andrew E., ªStretchingthe socialpattern: the President ’sFair Employment Practices Committee and St. Louis,ºMissouri Historical Review, 93, Jan. [99],149± 164.

Mississippi {See also:VIII Ð Wood-Fickle, J.} LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 483

Montana [1] McDonald, VerlaincStoner, ªApaper of, by, and forthe people: the ProducersNews and the farmers ’ movement in northeasternMontana, 1918±1937,º Montana, 48,Winter [98], 18± 33.

NewEngland [1] {See also:III -AÐ Cronon, M.,Ely, C.;VII Ð TextileÐ Koistinen, D. } Doherty, Maura, ªCanariesin the coalmine: the deindustrializationof New England and the riseof the global economy,ºEssays in Economicand BusinessHistory, 18[99], 149± 162.

NewJersey [1] Bellante, Don and GabrielPicone, ª Fast food and unnatural experiments:another perspectiveon the NewJersey minimum wage,ºJournal ofLabor Research,20 [99], 463± 477.

NewMexico [1] {See also:VIII Ð MiningÐ Loosbrock,R. } Connier, SteveThomas, ªThey werenot easy: ahistory ofNew Mexico ranching and its culture,ºDAI, 59[99], 4191A, DA9911741.

New York [6] ÐÐ,ªUnion±management wageagreements in 1998,ºRegional Labor Review,1, Spring/Summer [99],27± 31. ÐÐ,ªUpcoming contract negotiations through mid -1999,ºRegional Labor Review,1, Spring/Summer [99],32± 34. Kasmir, Sharryn, ªOrganizingthe undergroundimmigrant labor force:a conversationwith Jennifer Gordon,ºRegional Labor Review,1, Fall [98],17± 23. { Long Island,NY } Kim, Jin Hee,ª Labor law and labor policy in NewYork State, 1920±1930s,º DAI, 60[99], 1293A, DA9927927. Mogensen,Vernon, ª Gluedto the tube: labor ’sunlikely victoryfor computer safety in Suffolk County,º RegionalLabor Review,1, Spring/Summer [99],19± 24. Silver, Marc,ª LongIsland labor: constraints, opportunities, and newstrategies,º Regional Labor Review,1, Fall [98],29± 33.

NewYork (NY)[7] {See also:III -AÐ Brighton, S.;IV -BÐ Saab, A.; VI-BÐ Michaels,T.; VIII Ð ClothingÐ Chin,M.; VIII Ð EducationÐ HigherÐ Romer,N.; XII -BÐ Kayton, B.} Gish, Clay, ªRescuingthe waifsand straysof the city; the westernemigration program ofthe Children ’s Aid Society{ 1853± 1890},ºJournal ofSocial History, 33:1[99], 121± 141. Glynn, Tom, ªBooks fora reformedrepublic; the Apprentices ’ Libraryof New York City, 1820±1865,º Libraries& Culture, 34:4[99], 347± 372. Krinsky, John, ªWork, welfare,and contentionin NewYork City: the potential of¯ exibleidentities in organizingopposition to workfare.ºCritical Sociology, 24:3[98], 277± 305. { published1999 } Marcus,Anthony Allen, ªDown and out in NewYork City.ºDAI, 59[99], 4199A± 4200A, DA9912605. Kieffer,Cavaid and Immanuel Ness,ª Organizingimmigrant workersin NewYork City: the LIUNA asbestos removal workerscampaign,º Labor Studies Journal, 24:1[99], 12± 26. Strozier,Matthew, ªOrganizingdrive,º City Limits, 24:6, June [99],13± 15. { ª Black-car driversÐ the chauffeurs forNew York ’sbusiness elite Ð recently won their ®rst unionizing victories ¼º } Wall, Diana Dizerega,ª Examininggender, class, and ethnicityin nineteenth -centuryNew York City,º HistoricalArchaeology, 33:1[99], 102± 117. { Working class women tenement dwellers viastudy oftheir ceramicdishware } 484 P.M.Filardo

North Carolina [1] {See also:VII Ð SoutheastÐ Durden, R.} Forret,Jeff, ª Slave labor in North Carolina ’santebellum goldmines,º North Carolina Historical Review,76:2 [99], 135± 162.

North Carolina Ð Burlington [1] Salmond, John A., ªTheBurlington dynamite plot: the 1934textile strike and its aftermath in Burlington, North Carolina,ºNorth Carolina HistoricalReview, 75, Oct. [98],398± 434.

Northwest,The {See: XII-CÐ Widenor, M.}

Ohio {See: VIIIÐ EducationÐ HigherÐ Benedict, M. }

OhioÐ Toledo [2] Borden, Timothy G., ªThesalvation ofthe Poles: workingclass ethnicity and Americanizationefforts duringthe interwarperiod in Toledo, Ohio,ºPolish AmericanStudies, 56,Autumn [99],19± 44. Borden, Timothy George,ª Toledois agoodtown forworking people: the labor question in twentieth-centuryAmerica,º DAI, 60[99], 1721A± 1722A, DA9932615. { includes discussion of UAWInternational Vice -President RichardT. Gosser }

Oklahoma [1] {See also: IV-BÐ Sellars,N., re:IWW } Bailey, James Paul, ªStanding out fortheir rights: industrial strikesin Oklahoma in the 1930s,º Chroniclesof Oklahoma, 76,Fall [98],298± 317.

OregonÐ Portland [1] Stroud, Ellen,ª Troubledwaters in ecotopia: environmental racismin Portland, Oregon,ºRadical HistoryReview, 74 [99], 65± 95. { An AfricanÐ American working class neighborhood }

Pennsylvania [1] {See also; IV-BÐ Hudson, M.;VIII Ð CoalÐ Donovan, J.} Luconi,Stefano, ªThemachine boss as asymbolic leader,ºOral HistoryReview, 26:1 [99], 45± 66. {Discusses the careerof John R.Torquato, 1908±85, longtime Democratic Partyleader in Cambria County (Johnstown). Includes discussion oflabor relations/ history }

Philippines(1898± 1946) {See: III-CÐ Bjork, K.}

Puerto Rico,Commonwealth of {See: III-CÐ Bjork,K.; VI -AÐ Grosfoguel, R. }

South, The[1] {See also:III -FÐ Chamberlain,C.; XII -CÐ Flamming,D. } Heinicke,Craig, ªSouthern tenancy, machines, and production scaleon the eveof the cottonpicker ’s LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 485

arrival,ºSocial ScienceHistory, 23:3[99], 435± 458. { 1935±1945: focus on laborregime, and on supervision costs }

South Carolina Ð Charleston [1] Hamer, FritzPeter, ª ASouthern cityenters the twentiethcentury: Charleston, its Navy Yard, and WorldWar II, 1940±1948,º DAI, 59[99], 2685A± 2686A, DA9841726.

Southeast, The[1] Durden, Robert F., ªElectrifyingthe Piedmont Carolinas: the beginningof the DukePower Company, 1904±1925. Part one,º North Carolina HistoricalReview, 76:4 [99], 410± 440.

Southwest,The {See: XII-CÐ Skinner, R.}

Texas {See: VIIIÐ Wood-Reich, S.}

TexasÐ San Antonio [1] Bauder, Harald Sven, ªLabor marketmarginalization ofyoung Latinos in San Antonio, Texas:a geographicalperspective of neighborhood processes,ºDAI, 59[99], DANQ33811.

VermontÐ Barre {See: XII-DÐ Lane, K.,ªOldLabor Hall ¼ preserving a¼iconº }

Virginia [1] Haines, David W., ªMinimalism in governance:workers ’ compensation in aSouthern state{ Virginia},º Administration &Society, 31:5[99], 616± 638.

VirginiaÐ Lynchburg [1] Cole, Jeffrey,ª Theimpact ofthe GreatDepression and NewDeal on the urban South: Lynchburg, Virginiaas acasestudy, 1929±1941,º DAI, 60[99], 1290A, DA9925908.

WashingtonÐ Seattle [1] {See also:XII -DÐ Kagel, S.} Qazi, Joan Aileen,ª Thehands behind the apple: farm women and workin North CentralWashington,º DAI, 59[99], 4497A, University of Washington. { Latina &Anglo experiences }

West, The {See: V-BÐ Quan-Wickham,N.; VI -C-2Ð Zhu, L.;VIII Ð MiningÐ LeCain, T.}

WestVirginia {See: XII-DÐ Bartlett, L. }

Wisconsin [1] {See also:VIII Ð Transportation Ð RailÐ McGarvie,M. } Loew,Patty, ªTheback ofthe homefront: Black and AmericanIndian women in Wisconsinduring 486 P.M.Filardo

WorldWar II,º Wisconsin Magazine of History, 82:2[99], 83± 103. { Includes discussion ofwork experience}

WisconsinÐ Milwaukee[1] Eimer,Stuart, ªFrom business unionism to socialmovement unionism: the caseof the AFL± CIO MilwaukeeCounty Labor Council,ºLabor Studies Journal, 24:2[99], 63± 81.

VIII,INDUSTRIES, OCCUPATIONS, AND TRADES [89] [Readersare encouraged tosee related geographical entries Ð i.e.for Agriculture,see also Section VII,California Agriculture [1] {See also:III -CÐ Shulman, S.;VII Ð KansasÐ Grossardt,T.; Montana Ð McDonald, V.;Washington Ð Qazi, J.} Gordon, Robert, ªPoisons in the ®elds:the UnitedFarm Workers,pesticides, and environmental politics,ºPaci® c HistoricalReview, 68:1 [99], 51± 77.

Automobile[6] {See also:III -H-1bÐ Tuski, D.;III -H-2Ð Parker,M.; IV -AÐ Lowery, C.;V -BÐ M/a/e?/yer,S.; VII Ð MichiganÐ DetroitÐ Jones, T.; X-CÐ Deery, S.} Baltakis, Anthony, ªOn the defensive:Walter Reuther ’stestimony beforethe McClellanlabor rackets committee,ºMichigan Historical Review, 25:2 [99], 47± 68 { Focuses on his1958 testimony regarding UAWLocal 833,Sheboygan, Wisconsin, andits 4 1 year-oldstrike against KohlerCompany, a home ®xtures manufacturer } Moody, Kim, ªAuto parts workersvote union in Detroit ’s `empowerment ’ zone,ºLabor Notes, 249, December[99], 1, 11. Lambourne, KarenLouise, ª Labor management participation and the reproductionof gender and labor± management relationsin the workplace,ºDAI, 59[99], 2739A, DA9839662. { At a Midwestern auto plant } Rinchart, James, ªTheIMVP ’sleanproduction benchmark: acritique,ºMonthly Review,50:8 [99], 19± 27. Staughter, Jane, ªPartnership takesa hit at Saturn,ºLabor Notes, 241,April [99],1, 11. Wypijewski, JoAnn, ªPounding out aDRUMbeat,º New Left Review, 234 [99], 141± 159. { Review essay occasioned bythe publication ofan updatededition ofGeorgakas and Surkin ’sDetroit: Idomind dying, 1998}

Clothing[7] {See also: V-AÐ Zehren, M.;IX Ð Bender, D.;IX -CÐ Ambruster,R., Frundt, H.;IX -FÐ Bender, D.} Chin, MargaretMay, ªSewingwomen: immigrants and the NewYork City garmentindustry,º DAI, 59[99], 3974A, DA9910565. Juravich, Tom and JeffHilgert, ª UNITE ’svictoryat Richmak: community -based union organizingin communities ofcolor,º Labor Studies Journal, 24:1[99], 27± 41. { Everett, Massachusetts } Parsons, Jean Louise,ª Dressmakers:transitions in the urban production ofcustom -made clothing, 1880±1920,º DAI, 59[99], 3940A± 3941A, DA9909001. Scott, GregoryShawn, ªSewingwith dignity: classstruggle and ethniccon¯ ict in the LosAngeles garmentindustry,º DAI, 59[99], 2740A, DA9838447. { Hispanic workers } Shippen, BenS., Jr., ªUnmeasuredskills in inter -industry wagedifferentials: evidence from the apparel industry,ºJournal ofLabor Research,20:1 [99], 161± 169. Tucker,Eric, ª Thelonesome death ofAlexander Reder, alien cloakmaker,º Beaver, 79 [99], 36± 40. Zehren,Maria A., ªThedangling scissors: marriage, family and workamong Italian women in the clothingindustry in Baltimore, 1890±1920,º DAI, 59[99], 3621A, DA9907552. LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 487

Coal [2] Davies, John, ªAuthority, community, and con¯ict: rioting and aftermath in alate -nineteenthcentury Pennsylvania coaltown,º Pennsylvania History, 66,Summer [99],339± 363. Savage, CarlettaHarvey, ªWomen coalminers: another chapterin centralAppalachia ’sstruggleagainst hegemony,ºMAI, 37[99], 1687, MQ1394112. { focus on two cases, involving, respectively, sexual harassment& discrimination, i.e./ShoemakerPeephole, andBishop Coalv. Brenda Salyers }

Communications [1] {See also: IX-GÐ Borgers, F.:X± C Ð Batt, R.} Nissen, Bruceand Seth Rosen, ªTheCWA model ofmembership -based organizing,ºLabor Studies Journal, 24:1[99], 73± 88. { District 4,Midwest Great LakesStates }

Construction [2] Byrd, Barbara, ªWomen in carpentryapprenticeship: acasestudy { 1996± 97},ºLabor Studies Journal, 24:3[99], 3± 22. Thieblot, A.J., ªPrevailingwage laws and black employment in the constructionindustry,º Journal of Labor Research,20:1 [99], 155± 159.

Education [6] {See also:VII Ð CaliforniaÐ Heard,D.: VII Ð CaliforniaÐ Los AngelesÐ Donovan, J.} Babcock, Linda and John Engberb,ª Bargainingunit composition and the returnsto educationand tenure,ºIndustrial and Labor Relations Review,52 [98], 163± 178. { Pennsylvania, 1983±1989 data} Chiaradia, John E., ªAlbert Shanker no paeans,ºNew Politics, 26[99], 192± 194. Makowsky, MichaelRichard, ªTheorigins and development ofteacher unions in Florida,ºDAI, 59 [99],4513A, DA9914367. { Roles ofNEA &AFT } Merri®eld, John, ªMonopsony powerin the marketfor teachers: why teachersshould support market-based educationreform,º Journal ofLabor Research,20:3 [99], 377± 391. O’Loughlin, Jim, ªQuestioningthe `success’ ofcollaborative learning,ºSocialist Review,27:1/ 2[99], 29± 47. {Its relationship to TQM } Pizzigati,Sam, ªThemerger failsÐ what nextfor education unions? Without NEA± AFT unity, canthe Americanlabor movement savepublic education?ºWorkingUSA, 2:4[98], 10± 22.

EducationÐ Higher [14] {See also:XII -B-2Ð Nelson, C.} ÐÐ,ªActivism and the academy { thematic portion ofissue of },ºThe Minnesota Review, 50± 51 [99], 55± 159. Aparicio, FrancesR., ªThrough my lens:a video projectabout women ofcolor faculty at the University ofMichigan,º Feminist Studies, 25:1[99], 119± 130. Benedict,Mary Ellen and LisaWilder, ª Unionization and tenureand rank outcomesin Ohio universities,ºJournal ofLabor Research,20 [99], 185± 201. Dirnbach, Eric.ª Graduateemployees at the Universityof Michigan,º Z Magazine,12:7/ 8[99],25± 28. Kelly,Philip Patrick, ªTeacherunionism and professionalism: an institutional analysis ofpeer review programsand the competingcriteria for legitimacy,º DAI, 59[99], 3783A± 3784A, DA9909327. Moser,Richard, ªThenew academic labor system and the newacademic citizenship,º Radical HistoriansNewsletter, 80, May [99],1, 12±13, 16. Nelson, Cary. ªLessonsfrom the job wars: latecapitalism arriveson campus,ºSocial Text,44 [95], 119± 134. Piascik, Andy, ªIndependentclericals ’ union may becomea targetfor raids, af®liation,º Labor Notes, 248,Nov. [99],5, 11. 488 P.M.Filardo

Rassuli, Ali, etal., ªTheeffect of experience on facultyattitudes toward collectivebargaining: a cross-temporal analysis,ºJournal ofLabor Research,20 [99], 203± 218. Romer, Nancy, ªTheCUNY struggle:class & racein public highereducation,º New Politics, 26[99], 47± 56. Rudel, Thomas K.and Judith M.Gerson,ª Postmodernism, institutional change,and academic workers:a sociologyof knowledge,º Social ScienceQuarterly, 80:2 [99], 213± 228. Watl, Stephen, ªFaculty, academicfreedom, and the strikeat Syracuse{ University, New YorkState, 1998},ºJournal ofthe MidwestModern Language Association, 32:2/3[99],40± 50. Yates, MichaelD., ªFrederickTaylor comesto college:breaking faculty jobs into discretetasks,º Z Magazine,12:3 [99], 45± 48. Zaidi, Ali Shehad, ªPowerfulcompassion: the strikeat Syracuse{ University, New YorkState, 1998 },º Monthly Review,51:4 [99], 27± 38.

Electrical[1] Slaughter, Jane, ªPowerstruggle: unions ®ght electricalderegulation,º Labor Notes, 244,July [99], 8± 9.

Entertainment &MassMedia [2] {See also: IV-BÐ Bose, E.} Giovacchini, Saverio, ªDemocraticmodernism and the Hollywood community, 1933±1953,º DAI, 59 [99],2685A, DA9840266. Tucker,Sherrie, ª Tellingperformances: jazz history rememberedand remadeby the women in the band,ºOral HistoryReview, 26:1 [99], 67± 84.

Entertainment Ð Sports [3] Humphreys, LesleyL., ªDiamond Mines:Players Organize in the Major LeaguesÐexhibit at the National Baseball Hall ofFame,º Labor ’sHeritage,10:2 [99], 4± 21. Reynolds, Robert D., ªOrganizedlabor and organizedbaseball: missed opportunities, 1899±1917,º Labor’sHeritage,10:2 [99], 22± 33, 48±57. Staudohar, Paul D., ªLabor relationsin basketball: the of1998± 99,º Monthly Labor Review, 122:4[99], 3± 9.

Finance &Insurance {See: III-G-1Ð Yates, J.}

Food Preparation &Service [6] {See also:III -H-2Ð Townsend, A. } Bills, David B., ªLabor market information and selectionin alocalrestaurant industry: the tenuous balance betweenrewards, commitments, and costs,ºSociological Forum, 14:4[99], 583± 607. Grey,Mark A., ªImmigrants, migration, and workerturnover at the HogPride { pseudonym} pork packing plant,ºHuman Organization, 58:1[99], 16± 27. Gruelle,Martha, ªSmile ¼orelse! Clerks say Safeway ’spolicy leadsto sexualharassment,º Labor Notes, 238,January [99],16, 13. Gruelle,Martha, ªTeamstermeat packerstake on IBP with littlesupport fromtheir union,º Labor Notes, 245,August [99], 1, 10±11. Horowitz,Roger and Rick Halpern, ªWork, race,and identity: self -representationin the narrativesof black packinghouse workers,ºOral HistoryReview, 26:1 [99], 23± 43. Zachry, MarkRandol, ªWorkplacegenres: a sociohistoricalstudy ofcommunicative practicesin a production company,ºDAI, 59[99], 2483A, DA9841099. { RathPacking Company,Waterloo, Iowa,1920± 1985 } LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 489

Health Care [7] {See also: IV-BÐ Young, C.; V-AÐ Bradford.M., Mills,E., Turner, P.;VI -AÐ Choy, C.; VI-C-2Ð Tung, C.; X-CÐ Reshef, Y.} ÐÐ,ªTheHigh road: SEIUrethinks hospital organizingtactics,º Labor Notes, 249,December [99], 7± 10. Bacon, David, ªUnionizingat UCSF Stanford health care,ºZ Magazine,12:1 [99], 16± 19. Breslow,Marc, ª Health careworkers confront managed care,ºDollars and Sense,221 [99], 18± 21, 39. Burke, MargaretLouise, ª Respectin the workplace: voiceof the employee,ºDAI, 59[99], 2737A - 2738A,DA9842065. { Alarge Western health care organization } Jervis, LoriLynn, ªInequality and affection:the contradictionsof culture in an Americannursing home,ºDAI, 59[99], 4464A, DA9913348. Jones, James R., ªAn examination ofthe emotional labor constructand its effectson employee outcomes,ºDAI, 59[99], 3076A± 3077A, DA9903771. { At alarge Midwestern privatehospital } Wolf, JacquelineH., ªMercenaryhirelings or a greatblessing?: doctors ’ and mothers’ con¯ icted perceptionsof wet nurses and the rami® cationsfor infant feedingin Chicago, 1871±1961,º Journal ofSocial History, 33:1[99], 97± 120. { wet nursing asan occupation }

Iron,Metal and Steel[3] {See also:III -AÐ Bezis-Selfa, J.} Berg,Peter, ª Theeffects of high performancework practices on job satisfactionin the UnitedStates steelindustry,º Relations IndustriellesÐIndustrial Relations, 54:1[99], 111± 135. Juravich, Tom and KateBronfenbrenner, ª Lockedout but holding togetherin Ravenswood { West Virginia},ºWorkingUSA, 3:1[99], 8± 22. Kollros,James Karl,ª Creatinga steelworkers union in the Calumet region,1933 to 1945,ºDAI, 59 [99],3171A, DA9903462.

Library [1] Hansen, Debra Gold, ªAt the pleasureof the Board: women librarians and the LosAngeles Public Library, 1880±1905,º Libraries & Culture, 34:4[99], 311± 346.

Maritime[1] {See also:VII Ð Massachusetts Ð GloucesterÐ Santos, M.;XII -DÐ Kagel, S.} Vickers,Daniel and VinceWalsh, ªYoung men and the sea: the sociologyof seafaring in eighteenth - centurySalem, Massachusetts,ºSocial History, 24,January [99],17± 38.

Mining (excludingCoal) [2] {See also:III -CÐ Hitchens, C.;V -BÐ Quan-Wickham,N.; VI -C-2Ð Zhu, L.; VIIÐ MichiganÐ Leitner, J.} LeCain, Timothy J., ªMovingmountains: technologyand the environmentin westerncopper mining,º DAI, 59[99], 3615A, DA9906865. Loosbrock, Richard D., ªThechanging faces of a mining town: the dual labor system { Anglo/Hispanic } in Elizabethtown, NewMexico,º New Mexico Historical Review, 74:4 [99], 353± 373.

Music [1] Dickerson,Lowell Dwight, ªCentralAvenue meets Hollywood: the amalgamation ofthe black and white musicians ’ unions in LosAngles,º DAI, 59[99], 3273A, DA9905519. { Respectively, AFM locals 767and 47 }

Newspaper[1] Chomsky, Daniel, ªThemechanisms ofmanagement controlat the NewYork Times,ºMedia Culture &Society, 21:5[99], 579± 599. 490 P.M.Filardo

Oil,Chemical & Atomic {See: V-BÐ Quan-Wickham, N.}

Professions, The[1] Reisch, Michaeland JaniceAndrews, ª Uncoveringa silentbetrayal: usingoral history to explorethe impact ofMcCarthyism on the professionof social work in the UnitedStates,º Oral History Review,26:2 [99], 87± 106.

PublicSector [4] {See also:VII Ð CaliforniaÐ Kim, M.} King,Desmond, ªTheracial bureaucracy: African Americans and the Federalgovernment in the era ofsegregated race relations { 1890s± 1945},ºGovernance: an InternationalJournal ofPolicy and Administration, 12:4[99], 345± 377. Martin, Brendan, ªPublic employeesconfront the perilsof privatization,º Working USA 3:1[99], 25± 41. Slater, Joseph Elijah, ªDown by law: public sectorunions and the statein America, WorldWar I to WorldWar II,º DAI 60[99], 1298A, DA9924382. Yamagata, Hisashi, ªDynamics ofgender inequality in the federalgovernment over a quarterof a century {1962± 1988},ºDAI 60[99], 2258A, DA9936019.

Service [2] {See also:III -G-IÐ Ludwig, E.} Christiansen, LarsDavid, ªThemaking ofa civilrights union: the National DomesticWorkers Union of America {1968± 1996},ºDAI, 60[99], 898A, DA9922655. Napierski-Pranci,Michelle Rose, ªFrom domesticservant to service® rmemployee: powerand control in the reconstructingof the job ofmaid,º DAI, 59[99], 3980A, DA9911530. { Participation observation, interviews at Clean Sweep, Inc.,an international residential cleaning service ®rm }

Textile [3] {See also:III -AÐ Cronin, M.,Ely, C.,Husband, J.; VII Ð Massachusetts Ð Huataniemi, S.;North CarolinaÐ BurlingtonÐ Salmon J.;XII -BÐ Ranta, J.} Koistinen,David Joshua, ªDealingwith deindustrialization: economics,politics, and policy duringthe declineof the NewEngland textile industry, 1920±1960,º DAI, 60[99], 1726A, DA9930940. Minchin, Timothy J., ªBlack activism, the 1964Civil Rights Act, and the racialintegration of the Southern textileindustry,º Journal ofSouthern History, 65:4[99], 809± 844. Whalen, Robert W., ªRecollectingthe cottonmill wars: proletarian literatureof the 1929±1931 Southern textilestrikes,º North Carolina HistoricalReview, 75, Oct. [98],370± 397.

Transportation Ð Air [1] {See also:XII -DÐ Rosen, S.} Shreve, Anita, ªFiction: the union rep. Inan excerptfrom the stunningnew novel The Pilot’s Wife, a woman ®nds astrangerat herdoor in the latenight. It ’sthe man fromthe union, thereto deliver bad news,ºWorking USA, 2:3[98], 47± 55.

Transportation Ð Rail [3] {See also:III -FÐ Cooper,P.; VII Ð IlllinoisÐ Wright,T.; Illinois Ð GalesburgÐ Lause, M.;XII -DÐ Miner, C.} McGarvic,Mark, ªAcomparative casestudy ofimmigrant contractlabor on the MilwaukeeRoad,º Railroad History, 179,Autumn [98],69± 87. Niemann, Linda, ªRailroad voices:stories of railroad life across America,º WorkingUSA 3:1 [99], 56± 66. {Withphotographs by Lina Bertucci } LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 491

Williams-Searle,John, ªCourtingrisk: disability, masculinity, and liability on Iowa ’srailroads, 1868± 1900,ºAnnals ofIowa, 58,Winter [99], 27± 77.

Transportation Ð Trucking[7] {See also: IX-FÐ Russo, J.;XII -DÐ Chang, T.} ÐÐ,ªHoffain of®ce: Teamster president resolves issues, rather than building power,ºLabor Notes, 248,November [99],8± 9, 13. Belzer,Michael H. and Richard Hurd, ªGovernmentoversight, ,and labor racketeer - ing: lessonsfrom the Teamstersexperience,º Journal ofLabor Research,20:3 [99], 343± 365. Burks, Stephen V., ªTheorigins of parallel segmentedlabor and productmarkets: areciprocity -based agencymodel with an application to motor freight,ºDAI, 60[99], 487A, DA9920589.{ includes discussion ofderegulation } Moon, Susan Hankins, ªWomen ’sfeelingsabout the work -family interfaceof long -haul truckdrivers: sixdays on the road and he ’sgonna be home tonight,ºDAI, 59[99], 4539A, DA9914148. Slaughter, Jane, ªTeamsterslaunch bold strikeat Overnite,but its effectivenessis in doubt,ºLabor Notes, 249,December [99], 3, 11. West,Jim, ªCan Hoffarestore the power?ºLabor Notes, 238,January [99],1, 10±11. Witt, Mattand Rand Wilson, ªTheTeamsters ’ UPSstrikeof 1997: building anewlabor movement,º Labor Studies Journal, 24:1[99], 58± 72.

Wood [2] {See also: V-BÐ Quan-Wickham,N.; VI -C-IÐ Nicholls, D. } Fickle, James E., ªComfortable and happy? Louisiana and Mississippi lumber workers,1900± 1950,º Louisiana History, 40,Fall [99],407± 432. Reich, StevenAndrew, ª Themaking ofa southernsawmill world: race,class, and ruraltransformation in the piney woods ofEast Texas, 1830± 1930,º DAI, 59[99], 4514A, DA9913873. { Includes discussion ofthe interracial Brotherhoodof Timber Workers, founded 1911 }

IX.COMPARATIVE [30] A.General, global,multiregional [12] {See also:XII -CÐ Wilk, D.} Allen, Michael,ª Worldpolitical economy, genderand IR:women, bargainingand changein seven structuresof world political economy,ºReview of International Studies, 25:3[99], 453± 474. Buchdale, Robert and JensChristiansen, ªLabor relationsand productivity growthin advanced capitalist countries,ºReview of Radical Political Economics,31:1 [99], 87± 110. Clayton, Richard and Jonas Pontusson, ªWelfare -stateretrenchment revisited: entitlement cuts, public sectorrestructuring, and inegalitariantrends in advancedcapitalist societies,ºWorld Politics, 51, Oct. [98],67± 98. Dex,Shirley, etal., ªThecharacteristics of the low paid: across -national comparison,ºWork, Employment and Society, 13:3[99], 503± 524. Flanagan, Robert J., ªMacroeconomicperformance and collectivebargaining: an international perspective,ºJournal ofEconomic Literature, 37:3 [99], 1150± 1175. Harrington,Michael, ª Tradeand socialinsurance: the development ofnational unemployment insurancein advancedindustrial democracies,ºDAI, 59[99], 3626A, DA9906210. McMichael,Philip, ªTheglobal crisisof wage -labour,ºStudies in Political Economy, 58[99], 11± 40. Parr,Joy, ªHomeworkersin global perspective,ºFeminist Studies, 25:1[99], 227± 235. { Review essay } Perreault,Normand, ªThedevelopment ofalternatives to Taylorist production: the impact oflabour marketregulation,º DAI, 59[99], 4522A± 4523A, DA9913863. { Experiences ofCaterpillar, USA, Pratt& Whitney, Canada,and late -communist Czechoslovakia } Quinlan, Michael,ª Theimplications oflabour marketrestructuring in industrializedsocieties for occupational health and safety,ºEconomic and IndustrialDemocracy, 20:3 [99], 427± 460. Starr, Armory, ªNaming the enemy: the emergenceof an international anti -corporatesocial move - ment.ºDAI, 59[99], 3982A± 3983A, DA9910527. 492 P.M.Filardo

Wallerstein,Michael, ª Wage -settinginstitutions and pay inequality in advancedindustrial societies,º AmericanJournal ofPolitical Science,43:3 [99], 649± 680.

B.Africa &theNear East Depelchin, Jacques, ªFrom the endof slavery to the endof apartheid: toward aradicalbreak in African history?ºComparative Studies ofSouth Asia, Africaand the MiddleEast, 16:1(96), 85±97 {compared with history ofU.S. slavelabor system}

C.TheAmericas (seealso: Canada) [2] Armbruster, Ralph Joseph, ªGlobalization and cross -borderlabor organizingin the garmentand automobile industries,ºDAI, 59[99], 4294A, DA9911544. Frundt, Henry,ª Cross -borderorganizing in the apparel industry: lesbians fromCentral America and the Caribbean,ºLabor Studies Journal, 24:1[99], 89± 106.

D.Canada [3] Baker, Michaeland NicoleM. Fortin, ªWomen ’swagesin women ’swork: aU.S./Canada comparison ofthe rolesof unions and public goodssector jobs,º American Economic Review, 89:2 [99], 198± 203. Jackson, Andrew,ª TheFree Trade AgreementÐ a decadelater,º Studies in Political Economy, 58 [99],141± 160. Pickett,Evelyne Stitt, ªHoboes acrossthe border:a comparison ofitinerant cross -borderlaborers betweenMontana and WesternCanada,º Montana, Spring [99],18± 31.

E.Asia, Australia &NewZealand [6] {See also: VI-AÐ Choy, C.} Dannin, EllenJ., ªTheTEAM Act: usingcomparative experienceto assesslabor± management cooperation,ºLabor LawJournal, Winter[99], 245± 251. { U.S.& New Zealand } Kim, Joan Kium, ªStructurationof international contractlabor migration: acomparative analysis of overseasmigrant workers in South Koreaand Mexicanbraceros in the UnitedStates,º DAI, 60 [99],1785A± 1786A, DA9931285. Kim, Young-seong,ª Essayson unionism,ºDAI, 60[99], 1693A, DA9929867. Moriguchi,Chiaki, ªTheevolution ofemployment systems in the UnitedStates and Japan, 1900±1960: acomparative historical and institutional analysis,ºDAI, 59[99], 3915A, DA9908827. Schor, Francis, ªVirilesyndicalism in comparative perspective:a genderanalysis ofthe IWWin the UnitedStates and Australia,ºInternational Labor and Working -Class History, 56[99], 65± 77. Shibata, Hiromichi, ªAcomparison ofAmerican and Japanese workpractices: skill formation, com - munication, and con¯ict resolution,º Industrial Relations, 38[99], 192± 214.

F. Europe (seealso: United Kingdom) [5] Bender,Daniel, reviewer,ª Bobbins, pins, and runways: the needletrades and the remakingof working-classhistory,º Radical HistoryReview, 73 [99], 204± 212. Collomp, Catherine, ªImmigrants, labor markets, and the state, acomparative approach: Franceand the UnitedStates, 1880±1930,º Journal ofAmerican History, 86:1[99], 41± 66. Hansen, Hal, ªCaps and gowns:historical re¯ectionson the initiatives that shaped learningfor and at workin Germanyand the UnitedStates, 1800±1945,º Business and EconomicHistory, 28:2[99], 19± 24. Russo, John, ªStrategiccampaigns and international collectivebargaining: the caseof the IBT, FIET, and Royal Ahold NV,ºLabor Studies Journal, 24:3[99], 23± 37. Strikwerda, Carl, ªTidesof migration, currentsof history: the state, economy, and the transatlantic movement oflabor in the nineteenthand twentiethcenturies,º International Review of Social History, 44:3[99], 367± 394.

G.UnitedKingdom [2] {See also:XII -DÐ Bongorno, F. } Borgers,Frank, ªGlobal UnionismÐ beyond the rhetoric:the CWA North Atlantic Alliance,ºLabor Studies Journal, 24:1[99], 107± 122. LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 493

Wood, Stephen and John Godard, ªThestatutory union recognitionprocedure in the Employment Relations Bill: acomparative analysis,ºBritish Journal ofIndustrial Relations, 37:2[99], 203± 245. {Comparedto USandCanada, 1970s }

X.RELATED/THEMATICWORKS [64] [A.Symposia/ ThematicIssues; B. Economics/PoliticalEconomy; C.Industrial Relations/The Workplace;D. Humanities &Social Sciences] A.Symposia/ThematicIssues [19] ÐÐ,ªCapitalism at the endof the millennium: aglobal survey,ºMonthly Review,51:3 [99], 1± 156. {thematic issue } ÐÐ,ªClass and consumption { thematic portion },ºInternational Labor and Working -Class History, 55, Spring [99],1± 128. { See selected articles throughout Bibliography } ÐÐ,ªComplicating categories:gender, class, raceand ethnicity,ºInternational Review of Social History, 44:Supplement 7[99],1± 169. { thematic issue Ð see selected articles throughout bibliography } ÐÐ,ªConfrontingclass { thematic issue of },ºHistorical Archaeology, 33:1[99], 1± 195. { See selected articles throughout Bibliography } ÐÐ,ªAcriticalsociology of work, past and present,º{ thematic issue of }CriticalSociology, 24:3 [98Ð published1999 ],187±317. { see selected articles throughout bibliography } ÐÐ,ªDavid Gordonspecial issues I and II,ºReview of Radical Political Economics,31:1, Winter,and 31:4, Fall [99],166 pp., 210pp. { see selected articles throughout bibliography } ÐÐ,ªEmotional labour,ºSoundings: aJournal ofPolitics and Culture, 11,Spring [99],114± 189. {thematic portion ofissue } ÐÐ,ªFifty years,three interviews: Paul M.Sweezy,Harry Magdoff, Ellen Meiksins Woods,º Monthly Review,51:1 [99], 1± 92. { Upon the 50thanniversary ofMonthly Review } ÐÐ,ªGenderedlabor,º International Labor and Working -Class History, 56[99], 1± 77, { thematic portion of} ÐÐ,ªJack London,º{ thematic issue of }Europe:Revue Litteraire Mensuelle, 844± 845, Aout± September [99],298 pp. ÐÐ,ªNonunion employeerepresentation,º Journal ofLabor Research,20:1 [99], 1± 110. { A sympo- sium sponsored bythe John M.Olin Institute forEmployment Practice andPolicy. See selected articles throughout bibliography.Also contains articles on Canada,Germany, and Japan } ÐÐ,ªMeasuringproductivity,º Monthly Labor Review,122:2 [99], 24± 67. { three articles on Bureau of LaborStatistics practices } ÐÐ,ªSpecial issueon economicjustice,º Review of Social Economy, 57:4[99], 419± 542. { see selected articles throughout } ÐÐ,ªSpecial symposium issueon ruraland farm women in historical perspective,ºAgricultural History, 73:2[99], 131± 266. ÐÐ,ªSymposium: ªMinimum wages,entry -levelemployment and employees, and the transition from welfareto work,ºJournal ofLabor Research,20:4 [99], 443± 537. { Sponsored bythe John M.Olin Institute forEmployment Practice andPolicy. See articles throughout Bibliography } ÐÐ,ªSymposium on Post -Fordism and the natureof work,º Review of Social Economy, 57:2[99], 174± 243. {thematic portion ofissue ±see articles below in section X -B} ÐÐ,ªSymposium on the extentof poverty in the UnitedStates,º Review of Social Economy, 57:3 [99],278± 399. { thematic portion ofissue } ÐÐ,ªSymposium: Unionmoney, political action, and governmentregulation,º Journal ofLabor Research,20:3 [99], 271± 365. { Sponsored bythe John M.Olin Institute forEmployment Practice and Policy. See articles, indexed,in section IV -A,andelsewhere } Foster,John Bellamy, ªAclassicof our time: Laborand monopoly capital aftera quarter -century,º Monthly Review,50:8 [99], 12± 18. { One offour articles herein on the occasion ofthe 25thanniversary ofthe publication ofHarry Braverman ’sseminal book }

B.Economics/PoliticalEconomy [15] Aghion, Philippe, etal., ªInequality and economicgrowth: the perspectiveof the newgrowth theories,º Journal ofEconomic Literature, 37:4 [99], 1615± 1660. { argues that greater equity can aidgrowth } 494 P.M.Filardo

Basu, Kaushik, ªChild labor: cause,consequence, and cure,with remarkson international labor standards,ºJournal ofEconomic Literature, 37:3 [99], 1083± 1119. Bruyn, SeverynT., ªThemoral economy,ºReview of Social Economy, 57:1[99], 25± 46. Haslam, Paul, ªGlobalization and effectivesovereignty: a theoreticalapproach to the statein inter - national political economy,ºStudies in Political Economy, 58[99], 41± 68. Kaufman, BruceE., ªExpandingthe behavioral foundations oflabor economics,ºIndustrial and Labor Relations Review,52 [99], 361± 392. King,Mary C., ªKeepingpeople in theirplace: an exploratoryanalysis ofthe roleof violence in the maintenanceof property rightsin raceand genderprivileges in the UnitedStates,º Review of Radical Political Economics,31:3 [99], 1± 11. MacGregor,Susanne, ªWelfare,neo -liberalism and newpaternalism: threeways forsocial policy in late capitalist societies,ºCapital &Class, 67[99], 91± 118. Magnani, JenniferHunt, ªInvestmentin human capital, labor mobility and inequality: threeessays,º DAI, 59[99], 4242A, DA9912897. Marshall, M.G., ªFlexiblespecialization, supply -sideinstitutionalism, and the natureof work systems,º Reviewof Social Economy, 57:2[99], 199± 210. Moseley,Fred, ªTheUnited States economy at the turnof the century:entering a newera of prosperity?ºCapital &Class, 67[99], 25± 45. Petit, Pascal, ªStructuralforms and growthregimes of the Post -Fordist era,ºReview of Social Economy, 57:2[99], 220± 243. Pietrykowski, Bruce,ª Beyond the Fordist/Post -Fordist dichotomy: workingthrough the Second indus - trialdivide . {Pore& Sabel,1984 },ºReview of Social Economy, 57:2[99], 177± 198. Prasch, Robert E.and Falguni A.Sheth, ªTheeconomics of minimum wagelegislation,º Review of Social Economy, 57:4[99], 466± 487. Scars, Alan, ªThelean state and capitalist restructuring:towards a theoreticalaccount,º Studies in Political Economy, 59[99], 91± 114. Thompson, Paul and Chris Smith, ªBeyond the capitalist labor process:workplace change, the state, and globalisation,ºCritical Sociology, 24:3[98], 193± 215. { published1999 }

C.Industrial Relations/TheWorkplace [19] {See also: XIÐ Smith, M.} Arthur, JeffreyB. and GregoryS. Jeif, ªTheeffects of gainsharing on grievancerates and absenteeism overtime.º Journal ofLabor Research,20:1 [99], 133± 145. Bamberger,Peter A. and Linda H.Donohue, ªEmployee dischargeand reinstatement:moral hazards and the mixedconsequences of last chanceagreements,º Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 53:1[99], 3± 20. Batt, Rosemary, ªWorkorganization, technologyand performancein customerservice and sales,º Industrialand Labor Relations Review,52:4 [99], 539± 564. { At alarge unionized regional Bell operating company } Bergman, Paavo and Rune Wigblad, ªWorkers ’ last performance:why some factoriesshow theirbest resultsduring countdown,º Economic and IndustrialDemocracy, 20:3 [99], 343± 368. { Swedish experience} Bishop, Libby and David I.Levine,ª Computer -mediatedcommunication as employeevoice: a case study,ºIndustrial and Labor Relations Review,52 [99], 213± 233. Deery,Stephen, etal., ªIndustrialrelations climate, attendancebehaviours and the roleof trade unions,ºBritish Journal ofIndustrial Relations, 37:4[99], 533± 558. { Discussion basedupon study ofa U.S.auto manufacturer ’splant in Australia } Ellem, Bradom and John Shields, ªRethinking regionalindustrial relations:space, placeand the social relationsof work,º Journal ofIndustrial Relations, 41:4[99], 536± 560. [X± C] Graves,Philip E., etal., ªAmenitiesand the labor earningsfunction,º Journal ofLabor Research,20:3 [99],376± 396. Huys, Rik, etal., ªTowardless division oflabor? Newproduction conceptsin the automotive, chemical, clothing, and machine tool industries,ºHuman Relations, 51:1[99], 67± 93. Garen,John, ªUnions, incentivesystems, and job design,ºJournal ofLabor Research,20 [99], 589± 603. {basedupon 1976data } Giles,Anthony, etal., ªIndustrialrelations in the newworkplace: research,policy and practice,º Relations IndustriellesÐIndustrial Relations, 54:1[99], 15± 25. LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 495

Isler,Jonathan, ªOrganizinga nonstatic workforce,ºNature, Society, and Thought: aJournal of Dialecticaland HistoricalMaterialism, 12:1[99], 71± 79. [III± H] Lam, Helenand Yonatan Reshef,ª Arequality improvement and downsizingcompatible? Ahuman resourcesperspective,º Relations Industrielles,54:4 [99], 727± 747. McHugh,Patrick P. etal., ªEmployee stockownership plans: union in¯uence and stakeholder interests,ºEconomic and IndustrialDemocracy, 20:4 [99], 535± 560. Reschef,Yonatan and HelenLam, ªUnionresponses to quality improvement initiatives: factorsshaping support and resistance,ºJournal ofLabor Research,20:1 [99], 111± 131. { Four unions in a Canadianhospital, 1989± 1996 } Rothschild, Joyceand Marjukka Ollilainen, ªObscuringbut not reducingmanagerial control: does TQMmeasure up to democracystandards?º Economic and IndustrialDemocracy, 20:4 [99], 583± 623. Whitmire, John Timothy, ªThehealth inequalities oflabor marketsin the UnitedStates: presentinga theoreticalmodel and an empirical investigation,ºDAI, 59[99], 4534A, DA9914766. Westerholz,Ann, ªFrom alogicperspective to aparadox perspectivein the analysis ofan employee - ownedcompany,º Economic and IndustrialDemocracy, 20:4 [99], 503± 534. Wood, Stephen, ªGettingthe measureof the transformedhigh -performanceorganization,º British Journal ofIndustrial Relations, 37:3[99], 391± 417. { UsesU.S. data, 1990s }

D.Humanities &Social Sciences[11] Bugra, Ayseand GurokIrzik, ª Human needs,consumption, and socialpolicy,º Economics and Philosophy, 15:2[99], 187± 208. Carlisle, Y.M. and D.J. Manning, ªIdeologicalpersuasion and technologicaldeterminism,º Technology in Society, 21[99], 81± 102. Casey, Catherine, ªCome join ourfamily: disciplineand integrationin corporateorganizational culture,ºHuman Relations, 52:2[99], 155± 178. Collinge, Chris, ªSelf -organizationof society by scale:a spatial reworkingof regulation theory,º Environmentand Planning D:Societyand Space, 17:5[99], 557± 574. Farrelly, Colin, ªJusticeand aCitizen ’sBasic Income,ºJournal ofApplied Philosophy, 16:3[99], 283± 296. Ferguson,Sue, ªBuilding on the strengthsof the socialistfeminist tradition,º New Politics, 26[99], 89± 100. Gabriel,Yvonne, ªBeyond happy families: acriticalreevaluation of the control -resistance-identity triangle,ºHuman Resources,55:2 [99], 179± 203. Hinkson, John, ªThird Way politics and socialtheory: Anthony Giddens ’ critiqueof globalisation,º ArenaJournal, 13[99], 101± 123. Landa, Ishay, ªNietzsche,the Chineseworker ’sfriend,ºNew Left Review, 236 [99], 3± 23. { a left reading ofhis views on the } Paynter, Robert, ªClass analysis and historical archeology,ºHistorical Archeology, 33:1 [99], 184± 195. Wurst, LuAnn, ªInternalizingclass in historical archeology,ºHistorical Archeology, 33:1 [99], 7± 21.

XI.MARXOLOGY [19] [Marxismand thelabor question,and relatedissues] ÐÐ,ªMarxand antiquity,º{ thematic issue of }Helios,26:2 [99], 99± 182. { Contains: KarlMarx and classical antiquity: abibliographicintroduction, byGeorge McCarthy,pp. 165± 173 } ÐÐ,ªProjectingMarxism into Y2K. Papersfrom the Reno conference,October, 1999,º Nature, Society, and Thought: aJournal ofDialectical and HistoricalMaterialism, 12:1[99], 1± 128. {second oftwo special issues± see selected articles indexedthroughout bibliography } ÐÐ,ªRereadingthe Communist Manifesto ,ºConstellations, 6:2[99], 216± 248. { thematic section contains severalbrief articles Ð authors include RichardRorty, SaskiaSassen } ÐÐ,ªSocialism, capitalism, and the labor theoryof property: aMarxian±Austrian dialogue,ºRe - thinking Marxism,10:2 [98], 65± 105. { thematic portion ofthis issue, containing four articles } Biewener,Carole, ªApostmodern encounter:postructuralist feminism and the decenteringof Marx - ism,ºSocialist Review,27:1/ 2[99],71± 96. { ¼can help Marxismdevelop atheory ofclass that is helpful for¼ political movement towardnon -capitalism¼ } Brodine, Virginia,ª Theneed for a working -classenvironmentalism,º Nature, Society, and Thought: a Journal ofDialectical and HistoricalMaterialism, 12:1[99], 63± 70. 496 P.M.Filardo

Burkett, Paul, ªLabour, eco -regulation,and value: aresponseto Benton ’secologicalcritique of Marx,º HistoricalMaterialism, 3[98],119± 144. Billig, Michael,ª Commodity fetishism and repression:re ¯ectionson Marx,Freud and the psychology ofconsumer capitalism,º Theory & Psychology, 9:3[99], 313± 329. { Inathematic issue exploring the relationship between Marxismand psychology } Burbach, Roger,ª The(un)de® ningof postmodern Marxism:on smashing modernization and narrating newsocial and economicactors,º Rethinking Marxism,10:1 [98], 52± 65. Fairchild, Anne, ªMarxand Whitehead: aprocessreading of capitalism,º DAI, 60[99], 1166A± 1167A, DA9926888. Harvey,David L., ªThepractical contradictions of Marxism,º Critical Sociology, 24:1/2[98Ð published 1999], 1± 36. {discusses andreviews the debateon whether the working class remains/can bethe revolutionary agent } Kristianson, David Leo,ª Rethinking demand: acritiqueand reformulationof Marxian theories of price,ºDAI, 60[99], 1695A, DA9932324. Mellos,Koula, ªRei®cation and speculation,ºStudies in Political Economy, 58[99], 121± 140. Mavroudeas, Stavros, ªRegulationtheory: the road fromcreative Marxism to postmodern dis - integration,ºScience & Society, 63:3[99], 310± 337. McLennan,Gregor, ª Re -canonizingMarx,º Cultural Studies, 14:3[99], 555± 576. { reCommunist Manifesto} Philion, Stephen, ªBridgingthe gap betweennew social movement theoryand class,ºRethinking Marxism,10:4 [98], 79± 104. { with discussion ofU.S. post -WWIIlaborand social movements } Savran, Sungurand E.Ahmet Tonak, ªProductiveand unproductivelabour: an attempt at clari®cation and classi®cation,º Capital &Class, 68[99], 113± 152. Smith, MichelleA., ªPost -industrial capitalism: shaping workin the 1990s,ºDAI, 59[99], 3230A, DA9902366.{ Marxiantheory rejob satisfaction } Thompson, Frank Wilson, ªTechnicalchange and accumulation, capitalism, and socialism: essaysin political economy,ºDAI, 59[99], 3917A± 3918A, DA9910007.

XII.ARCHIVAL, REFERENCE & BIBLIOGRAPHY,PROFESSIONAL, NONPRINT FORMATS/MEDIA,NEW SERIALS [83] A.ARCHIVALSOURCES & GUIDES [6] {See also: VI-BÐ Soyer, D. {Jews}} ÐÐ,ªTheNational Archivesand RecordsAdministration ’sRecordGroup 469, Records of U.S. ForeignAssistance Agencies, includes the recordsof the U.S. Special Representativein Europe ’s Labor Information Division (SRELID). Contains approximately 92,000pages of documents coveringthe years1949± 51. { email:[email protected];phone: 301±713± 6800 },º Labor’s Heritage, 10:3[99], 78. Haag, Jaap and Artievan derHorst, Guide to the International Archivesand Collections at the IISH. Amsterdam,InternationalInstitute of Social History, 1999,608pp. { Contains four sections; Persons, Organizations, Collections on Subjects, Reproductions ofHoldings at OtherInstitutions, anda lengthy indexÐ some 140 pp.} Pilot, MichaelJ. ªThe{ Bureau ofLabor Statistics ’}Occupational Outlook Handbook: areviewof 50 yearsof change,º Monthly Labor Review,122:5 [99], 8± 26. Rosenthal, Neal, ªThequality ofBLS projections: ahistorical account,ºMonthly Labor Review,122:5 [99],27± 35. Tuskan, Erhan, Inventory ofthe archivesof the International Confederation ofFree TradeUnions (ICFTU) 1949± 1993,Amsterdam, InternationalInstitute for Social History, 1997,228 pp. Williams, Katherine,ª Major accessionsto repositoriesin 1997relating to labour history,ºLabour HistoryReview, 63:3 [98], 324± 329.

B.REFERENCE& BIBLIOGRAPHY [44] 1.Serials [19] ÐÐ,ªBibliography,ºInternational Review of Social History, 44[99], 119± 149, 325± 354, 509± 538. {Lists andabstracts books only. Dividedinto two portions: general issues, continents andcountries. Approximately360 entries } LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 497

ÐÐ,ªBibliography. Recentpublications in Canadian labour history,ºLabour/ LeTravail, 44[99], 321± 337. {Books andpamphlets, journal articles, andtheses, including masterstheses. Approximately350 entries. Michael Lonardo,English language compiler.Robert C.H.Sweeney, responsable destitres francais} ÐÐ,ªCurrentperiodicals,º Journal ofEconomic Literature, 37 [99],344± 563, 822± 1057, 1323± 1561, 1858±2190. { Among its four sections is the ªSubject index ofarticles ¼with selected abstracts,ºwhich contains the subdivision ªLaborand Demographic Economics,º pps. 494± 503, 979± 990, 1477± 1493, 2038± 2054} ÐÐ,ªInternetresources selected by the Instituteof Industrial Relations Library, Universityof California, Berkeley,ºIndustrial Relations, 38[99], 111± 112, 236± 237, 450± 451, 452± 458. { The Websites listed anddescribed include tradeunion, scholarly andadvocacy sites } ÐÐ,TheLeft Index: a quarterlyindex to periodicalsof the left,Numbers 1±4, Spring± Winter[99], 332 pp. {ª Journals indexed(approximately 100 titles) contain lengthy, critical, analytical material¼ newspapers arenot included.ºAlso contains abookreview index.The Winter issue contains acumulated subject index.Contains 2143entries } ÐÐ,ªNewbooks: an annotated listing,ºJournal ofEconomic Literature, 37:2 [99], 710± 821. {Contains the subdivision ªLaborand Demographic Economics,º pp. 761± 767 } ÐÐ,Newsletterof the Historiansof American Communism, volume 18[99]. { Quarterly, 8pp.The majorityof this serialis comprisedof ª Writings on the History ofAmerican Communism,ºan annotated bibliography.Other sections include: Archival,Research in Progress,WWW Sites. Subscriptions, $15, HOAC,POB 1216,Washington, CT06793,Editorial: John Haynes, 10041Frederick Ave., Kensing - ton, MD20895±3402: fax: 202± 707± 6336: email:[email protected] } ÐÐ,PersonnelManagement Abstracts, 45[99]. { Aquarterly guide to the literature ofmanagement, human resources, andpersonnel. Contains: abstractsof the periodicalliterature, abstractsof selected books. Approximately75 pages perissue } ÐÐ,ªRecentbooks and articlesof interest,º Radical HistoriansNewsletter, 80 [99], x± xx. {Approximately200 entries } ÐÐ,ªRecentpublications selectedby the Instituteof Industrial Relations Library, Universityof California, Berkeley,ºIndustrial Relations, 38[99], 113± 120, 238± 244, 452± 458, 613± 617. { Lists andabstracts books } ÐÐ,ªRecentscholarship,º Journal ofAmerican History, 85:4, 86:1±3 [99],1702± 1750, 347± 422, 881±946, 1455± 1515. { Lists articles, dissertations, andmonographs, and contains aªLaborºsection } ÐÐ,ªResearchin progress,ºIndustrial and Labor Relations Review,52:2± 53:1 [99], 330± 333, 496±499, 663, 170. ÐÐ,ªSocial Anarchism Index,1980± 1998: issues 1± 25, compiled by JerryKaplan,º Social Anarchism, 27[99], 71± 91. Adeeb, Yasmin and John Bennett,ª Annual bibliography: British labour history publications in 1997,º Labour HistoryReview, 63:3 [98], 330± 356. Adeeb, Yasmin and John Bennett,ª Thesesand dissertationson British and Irishlabour history, 1997; thesesand dissertationson international labour history,ºLabour HistoryReview, 63:3 [98], 302± 323. Adeeb, Yasmin and John Bennett,ª Annual bibliography: British labour history publications in 1998,º Labour HistoryReview, 64:3 [99], 314± 334. Adeeb, Yasmin and John Bennett,ª Thesesand dissertationson British and Irishlabour history, 1998; thesesand dissertationson international labour history,ºLabour HistoryReview, 64:3 [99], 290± 306. Berhanu, Aslaku, compiler, ªAn annotated bibliography ofreference sources on AfricanAmerican Women,ºJournal ofBlack Studies, 29,November [98],296± 305. Williams, Katherine,ª Major accessionsto repositoriesin 1998relating to labour history,ºLabour HistoryReview, 64:3 [99], 307± 313.

2.Monographs [25] Allen, Larry, The ABC±CLIO worldhistory companion to capitalism ,Santa Barbara, CA, ABC± CLIO, 1998,404 pp. Barbuto, DomericaM., American settlement houses andprogressive social reform:an encyclopedia ofthe American settlement movement ,Phoenix, OryxPress, 1999, 270 pp. Booker, M.Keith, Filmand the American left: aresearchguide ,Westport, CT, GreenwoodPress, 1999, 427 pp. 498 P.M.Filardo

Booker, M.Keith, The modernAmerican novel ofthe left: aresearchguide ,Westport, CT, Greenwood Press,1999, 412 pp. Confer,Robert G.and Thomas R.Confer, Occupational health andsafety: terms,de® nitions, and abbreviations ,2nded., Boca Raton, Florida, LewisPublishers, 1999,275 pp. Garner,Roberta and John Tenuto, Social movement theory andresearch: an annotated bibliographical guide,Lanham, MD, ScarecrowPress, 1997, vii, 274pp., Magillbibliographies. Gifford,Court, editor, Directory ofU.S. labor organizations, 1999edition ,Washington, DC, Bureauof National Affairs,301 pp. Greve,Bent, Historical dictionary ofthe welfare state ,Lanham, MD,ScarecrowPress, 1998, xiv, 159pp., Historicaldictionaries of religions, philosophies, and movements, no. 15. Hobbs, Sandy, etal., Childlabor: a worldhistory companion ,Santa Barbara, CA, ABC -CLIO, 1999,292 pp. {Focus on Great Britain andthe United States. Encyclopedia format,with briefdescriptive, rather than substantive analytic entries } Jacobs, Eva, Handbookof U.S. labor statistics: employment, earnings, prices,productivity, andother labor data,3rded., 1999,Lanham, MD,BernanPress, 380 pp. Jones, Marie, Annotations: aguide to the independent critical press ,Baltimore, MD, AlternativePress Center,1999, 511 pp. { Contains entries for328 serials } Kayton, Bruce, Radicalwalking tours ofNew YorkCity ,NewYork, SevenStories Press, 1999, 206 pp. Lubitz, Wolfgangand PetraLubitz, Trotsky bibliography:an international classi® edlist ofpublications about Leon Trotsky andTrotskyism, 1905± 1998 ,Third, completelyrevised and enlargededition, Munchen,K.G. Saur, 1999,2 v., xxvii,840 pp. Magnaghi, RussellM., Indianslavery, labor, evangelization, andcaptivity in the Americas:an annotated bibliography ,Lanham, MD, ScarecrowPress, 1998, xiii, 559pp., Native Americanbibliography series,no. 22. Nelson, Cary and Stephen Watt, Academickeywords: a devil ’sdictionary forhigher education , New York, Routledge,1999, 336 pp. { academicproletarianization focus } O’Hara, Phillip Anthony, Encyclopedia ofpolitical economy ,London, NewYork, Routledge,1999, 2 v., 1302 pp. Papadakis, Elim, Historical dictionary ofthe green movement ,Lanham, MD,ScarecrowPress, 1998, 223 pp. Historicaldictionaries of religions, philosophies, and movements, no. 20. Patten, J., editor, Yiddishanarchist bibliography ,aKateShipley Libraryproject in co -operation with the Anarchist ArchivesProject, 1998, 32 pp. { P.O.Box 38123,Cambridge, MA 02238±1323 } Powers,Roger S. and William B. Vogele, Protest, power, andchange: an encyclopedia ofnonviolent action from ACT-UP to women’s suffrage,NewYork, Garland, 1997,610 pp. Ranta, Judith A., Women andchildren ofthe mills:an annotated guide to nineteenth -century American textile factory literature ,Westport, CT, GreenwoodPress, 1999, xiv, 330pp., Bibliographies and indexes in Americanliterature, no. 28. Somers, Paul P., Jr., Editorial cartooning andcaricature: areference guide ,Westport, CT,Greenwood Press,1998, 205 pp. (Series:American Popular Culture). Shull, MichaelSlade, Radicalismin American silent ®lms,1909± 1929: a ®lmographyand history ,Jefferson, NC, McFarland& Company, 2000,345 pp. { Coversª virtually all commercially produced® ctional American (short andfeature) ®lmswhose plots centered upon, orin any way contained references to, the radicalleft ormilitant laboractivities .º } Stein, LauraW., Sexual harassmentin America:a documentary history (Primary Documentsin American Historyand Contemporary Issues),Westport, CT, GreenwoodPress, 1999, xxv, 297 pp. Stockwell, Foster, Encyclopedia ofAmerican communes, 1663±1963 ,Jefferson,NC McFarland& Com - pany, 1998,262 pp. Trahair, Richard C.S., Utopiasand utopians: an historical dictionary ,London, FitzroyDearborn, 1999, 480 pp.

C.PROFESSIONAL &CONFERENCES[10] ÐÐ,ªCurrentresearch,º International Labor and Working -Class History, 56[99], 193± 198. ÐÐ,ªNotebook/Carnet,ºLabour/ LeTravail, 43[99], 311± 319 { Canadianfocus. Aspace forthought - pieces, op-eds,short essays, orcommentary on any issue related to labourand the working class.Also publishes calls forpapers and other information on conferences andprojects. Compiledby Andrew Parnaby andTodd McCallum } LaborHistory B ibliography,1999 499

Baldoz, Rick and Charles S.Koeber,ª Work, differenceand socialchange: two decadesafter Braverman’s Laborand Monopoly Capital ,ºInternational Labor and Working -Class History, 55, Spring [99],135± 138. { Conference, May8± 10, 1998, SUNY at Binghamton } Brodsky, Adriana Mariel,ª Latin AmericanLabor HistoryConference,º International Labor and Working-Class History, 55,Spring [99],129± 132. { April17± 18, 1998, Duke University } Flamming, Douglas, ªThesecond wave: Southern industrialization, 1940±1970,º International Labor and Working-Class History, 55,Spring [99],132± 135. { Conference, June 5±6, 1998, Georgia Institute ofTechnology } Phillips, LisaW. and Daniel Kata, ªLabor, past and present:twentieth annual North AmericanLabor HistoryConference { 1998},ºInternational Labor and Working -Class History, 56[99], 106± 109. Scranton, Philip, ªTheSouthern HistoricalAssociation { 1998conference },ºInternational Labor and Working-Class History, 56[99], 109± 112. Skinner, Richard and TheresaAnn Case, ªSouthwest Labor Studies Association Conference,ºInter - national Labor and Working -Class History, 55,Spring [99],138± 142. { April24± 26, 1998, St. Edward’sUniversity, Austin, Texas } Widenor,Marcus, ª Paci®c NorthwestLabor HistoryAssociation Conference,ºInternational Labor and Working-Class History, 55,Spring [99],142± 145. { May15± 17, 1998, Portland State University } Wilk, Daniel Levinson, ªGlobalization frombelow: contingency,con¯ ict, contestation,ºInternational Labor and Working -Class History, 55,Spring [99],145± 148. { February6± 8, 1998, Duke Univer - sity}

D.NONPRINTFORMATS/ MEDIA,EXHIBITS AND MUSEUMS[19] {See also: IV-BÐ Neve, B.;VIII Ð EducationÐ HigherÐ Aparicio,F.; XII -BÐ Booker, M.,Somers,P. } ÐÐ,ªLabor museums &working -classculture sites: selected locations in North America,ºLabor ’s Heritage,10:3 [99], 4± 33. Alexander,Mary, ªBetweena rockand ahard place: ahistory ofAmerican sweatshops, 1820±present, at the National Museumof American History,º Technology and Culture, 40:4[99], 861± 865. Apel, Dora, ªDiegoRivera and the left:the destructionand recreationof the RockefellerCenter mural,ºLeft History, 6:1[99], 67± 75. Bartlett, Larry,ª Rural murals: NewDeal art in WestVirginia,º Goldenseal, 24, Fall [98],36± 41. Beachley, DeAnna E., reviewer,ª Common man, mythic vision: the paintings ofBen Shahn,º Journal ofAmerican History, 86:1[99], 191± 194. { Exhibit,traveling, Jewish Museum, NYC,Nov. 8, 1998±Mar. 7, 1999: also title ofcatalog (Princeton, 1998);http:;dRjewishmuseum.org/ pages/special/ _exhibits/shahn/shahn.html } Bongorno, Frank, ªThePumphouse: PeoplesHistory Museum, Manchester{ England},º Labour History, 76[99], 149± 152. Chang, TracyF.H., reviewer,ª Powerat work: building ateamsterto teamsteraction network{ IBT video,15 minutes },ºLabor Studies Journal, 24:3[99], 76± 77. DeClercq,Neill, reviewer,ª Troubledpartnerships: when labor and management can ’tmake it work,º Labor Studies Journal, 24:3[99], 79± 81. { MerrimackFilms, 1999, 34 minutes. Discusses Bridgestone Tire Companyand United RubberWorkers, Polaroid (non -union), andothers } Garb, Margaret,ª LowerEast Side TenementMuseum,º Journal ofUrban History, 26:1[99], 108± 111. Green,Arachie, ªTin men on parade: the artof sheet -metal workers,ºLabor ’sHeritage,10:3 [99], 34± 47. Kagel,Sam, ªThe1934 strike as told by Sam Kagel,º{ Videocassette ofa talk given March6, 1999, as partof the three daySTRIKES! Conference at the University ofWashington, commemorating the 1919 Seattle andthe 1934West Coast MaritimeStrike. Availablefor $15 from the Center for LaborStudies, Box 353530,University ofWashington, Seattle, WA98195 } Lane,Karen, ª Old Labor Hall, Barre,Vermont. Preserving a working -classicon,º Labor ’s Heritage, 10:3[99], 48± 61. Latour, Jane, ªPuttinglabor on the map: the NewYork State { LaborHistory Map }project,ºLabor ’s Heritage,10:3 [99], 62± 77. { Contact: New YorkLabor History Association MapCommittee, Robert F. Wagner LaborArchives, New YorkUniversity, 70Washington Square South, New York,NY 10012 } Leary,Thomas E.,ªTheBooth Cotton MillsMuseum and the AmericanTextile History Museum,º Technologyand Culture, 40:2[99], 363± 368. { Both arelocated in Lowell, Massachusetts } 500 P.M.Filardo

Miner,Curtis, reviewer,ª Altoona RailroadersMemorial Museum,º Journal ofAmerican History, 86:1 [99],182± 186. Porton, Richard, ªAnarchists on ®lm: frommad bombers to secularsaints,º Cineaste, 24:2± 3 [99], 10± 16. Rosen, Stanley Rosebud, reviewer,ª Labor ’sman on the board, the newface of labor unions,ºLabor Studies Journal, 24:3[99], 77± 78. { Filmsfor the Humanities andSciences, 1998,30 minutes, color. An interview with Duane Woerth,labor leader and one ofthree union memberson the Boardof Directors ofNorthwestern Airlines } Savan, Barbara, ªBlueplate specials: paintings ofEast St. Louisrestaurant workers,º Labor ’s Heritage, 10:2[99], 34± 47. Stort, Richard, reviewer,ª Betweena rockand ahard place: ahistory ofAmerican sweatshops, 1820±present,º Journal ofAmerican History, 86:1[99], 186± 191. { Exhibit,April 22± December 10, 1998,National Museum ofAmerican History, Washington, DC:http:;dRwww.si.edu/nmah/ve/ sweatshops/start.htm }

E.NEWSERIALS [4] Ð Ð , TheLabor Index:an Online Database ,to be launched in 2000,by the AlternativePress Center.For information, and to reviewthe prototype, visit: www.altpress.orgor write to APC, Box 33109,Baltimore, MD,21218;ph/ fax:410 -243-2471/235-5325. Ð Ð , RegionalLabor Review ,published twicea year,commencing with volume 1, Spring/Summer [99],by the Centerfor the Study ofLabor and Democracyat HofstraUniversity. Subscription: $12/year.Address: 200 Barnard Hall, 104Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY11549;fax: 516-463-6519;email: [email protected]. { focus is on Long Island,NY } Ð Ð , Souls: aCriticalJournal of Black Politics,Culture, and Society ,quarterly, commencing with volume 1, number 1, Winter[99], Institute for Research in African -AmericanStudies at Columbia University. Ð Ð , Worklab Newsletter ,InternationalAssociation ofLabour Museums, No. 1(Apr. 1998)±, Copenhagen, Denmark. Futureissues (#4± )to be published electronicallyonly, and will be available to Worklab members (individual: 20Euro; institutional: 100Euro). Contact info: [email protected]; Arbejdermuscet,Romersgade 22, DK01362mKobenhavn, Den - mark. Homepage: www.worklab.dk (will includeselected articles from back issues).