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Rights Delayed : The American State and the Defeat of Progressive Unions, 1935-1950 - Charles W. Romney
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Rights Delayed

The American State and the Defeat of Progressive Unions, 1935-1950

By: Charles W. Romney

Hardcover | 23 June 2016

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Progressive unions flourished in the 1930s by working alongside federal agencies created during the New Deal. Yet in 1950, few progressive unions remained. Why? Most scholars point to domestic anti-communism and southern conservatives in Congress as the forces that diminished the New Deal state, eliminated progressive unions, and destroyed the radical potential of American liberalism. Rights Delayed: The American State and the Defeat of Progressive Unions argues that anti-communism and Congressional conservatism merely intensified the main reason for the decline of progressive unions: the New Deal state's focus on legal procedure. Initially, progressive unions thrived by embracing the procedural culture of New Deal agencies and the wartime American state. Between 1935 and 1945, unions mastered the complex rules of the NLRB and other federal entities by working with government officials. In 1946 and 1947, however, the emphasis on legal procedure made the federal state too slow to
combat potentially illegal cooperation between employers and the Teamsters. Workers who supported progressive unions rallied around procedural language to stop what they considered Teamster collusion, but found themselves dependent on an ineffective federal state. The state became even less able to protect employees belonging to left-led unions after the Taft-Hartley Act's anti-communist provisions-and decisions by union leaders-limited access to the NLRB's procedures. From 1946 until 1950, progressive unions withered and eventually disappeared from the Pacific canneries as the unions failed to pay the cost of legal representation before the NLRB. Workers supporting progressive unions had embraced procedural language to claim their rights, but by 1950, those workers discovered that their rights had vanished in an endless legal discourse.
Industry Reviews
"This book's theme is clear and strongly stated, and it has a curious resonance with modern politics."--Christopher J. Castañeda, H-FedHist "Highly recommended."--CHOICE "Romney's careful and enlightening scholarship shines fresh light on a foundational period of American labor history, and raises a tension between the value of procedure and the fair adjudication of rights."--Harvard Law Review "[A]ssiduously researched...Labor historians and scholars of labor law will learn much from this fine book."--Law and History Review "[V]itally important...Rights Delayed is a required reading for anyone seeking to understand, or even to reverse, the current state of American labor."--Labor Studies Journal

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