Library Catalog

Taking Back the Workers' Law : How to Fight the Assault on Labor Rights /

Dannin, Ellen

Taking Back the Workers' Law : How to Fight the Assault on Labor Rights / Ellen Dannin. - 1 online resource (208 p.)

Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- FOREWORD -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- Introduction: Reviving the Labor Movement -- 1. Why Judges Rewrite Labor Law -- 2. Developing a Strategy to Take Back the NLRA -- 3. NLRA Values, American Values -- 4. Litigating the NLRA Values-What Are the Challenges? -- 5. Litigation Themes -- 6. NLRA Rights within Other Laws -- 7. Trying Cases-The Rules -- 8. Using the NLRB as a Resource -- 9. An Invitation -- Notes -- General Index -- INDEX OF CASES DISCUSSED

restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec

Prolabor critics often question the effectiveness of the National Labor Relations Board. Some go so far as to call the Board labor's enemy number one. In a daring book that is sure to be controversial, Ellen Dannin argues that the blame actually lies with judicial decisions that have radically "rewritten" the National Labor Relations Act. But rather than simply bemoan this problem, Dannin offers concrete solutions for change. Dannin calls for labor to borrow from the strategy mapped out by the NAACP Legal Defense Fund in the early 1930s to eradicate legalized racial discrimination. This book lays out a long-term litigation strategy designed to overturn the cases that have undermined the NLRA and frustrated its policies. As with the NAACP, this strategy must take place in a context of activism to promote the NLRA policies of social and industrial democracy, solidarity, justice, and worker empowerment. Dannin contends that only by promoting these core purposes of the NLRA can unions survive—and even thrive.


Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.


In English.

9781501732393

10.7591/9781501732393 doi


Employee rights--United States.
Industrial relations--United States.
Labor laws and legislation--United States.
Labor History.
Legal History & Studies.
LAW / Labor & Employment.

344.7301