Under the Radar
By Ben Becker
Quotes
"It is tragic what we do in the poorest neighborhoods, entrapping children
in child laws which are truly stupid."
—Newt Gingrich, GOP presidential candidate, calling for the repeal of child labor
laws
"Living wage proposals are economically unfair because they change the basis
on which our economy operates."
—U.S. Chamber of Commerce, from an amicus brief filed with the Supreme Court of
Louisiana against the New Orleans living wage ordinance
Signs from Occupy Wall Street
"Lost My Job, Found an Occupation"
"Robin Hood Was Right"
"One Day the Poor Will Have Nothing Left to Eat But the Rich"
"Second Time I’ve Fought for My Country, First Time I’ve Known
My Enemy"[held by U.S. Marines veterans]
"I’m 84 and Mad as Hell"
"Due to Recent Budget Cuts, the Light at the End of the Tunnel Has Been Turned
Off"
"Arrested on Saturday, Back on Monday"
"Obama Is Not a Brown-Skinned Anti-War Socialist Who Gives Away Free Health
Care…You’re Thinking of Jesus"
"I Won’t Believe Corporations Are People Until Texas Executes One"
"Get a Job? I’ve Been Trying!"
Statistics
One out of three working Americans does not have retirement savings beyond Social
Security. (
Source:
www.alternet.org/economy/147570/the_retirement _nightmare:_half_of_americans_have_less_than_$2,000
_banked_for_their_golden_years)
Nearly half of New York City residents in poverty work full- or part-time jobs.
(
Source:
www.alignny.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/Poverty-In-NYC -September-2011.pdf)
Outrage at Troy Davis Execution Helped Jumpstart Occupy
Wall Street
"The struggle for justice doesn’t end with me." These were some
of the last words of Troy Davis, who was executed by the state of Georgia despite
claims of severe judicial and police misconduct. His case touched off a furious
international campaign to save his life. It also gave a jumpstart to the nascent
Occupy Wall Street movement during its inaugural week.
The day after Davis’s execution, hundreds of angry New Yorkers marched spontaneously
from Union Square through downtown Manhattan, growing in size as they went, and
repeatedly maneuvering against the police for possession of the streets. After a
few hours, they arrived at the Occupy Wall Street encampment, electrifying those
in Zuccotti Park.
Occupy Wall Street activists said the events of that night gave them the confidence
and inspiration to march toward Union Square two days later. During this march,
the New York Police Department arrested dozens and maced several peaceful protesters,
incidents which were captured on video and are widely credited with sparking nationwide
sympathy for the budding movement.
Unemployment Is Old News—The Real Story Is the
Employment Rate
While economists dissect and debate unemployment rates—with no universally accepted
gauge for "real unemployment"—the lesser-used employment-population ratio
and labor-participation rates have slipped through the cracks. Throughout 2010,
the overall employment-population ratio (for those over the age of sixteen) was
stuck at 58 percent—down from 65 percent a decade prior. The country has roughly
the same number of jobs today as it had in 2000, while the population has surged
by thirty million people over the same period. As a result, the economy would have
to add around eighteen million jobs to get back to the same
employment
rate as in 2000.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 6-9, Winter 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/11 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000002
On the Contrary
Earth to Labor: Economic Growth Is No Salvation
By Sean Sweeney
The notion that economic growth is, almost by definition, a good thing has been
subjected to serious and well-informed criticism in recent years. Diverse organizationally,
geographically, and ideologically, those challenging growth are united by one realization:
the world’s ecosystems are in a state of extreme distress and the planet will
be unlivable in just a few decades. Climate change, ocean acidification, species
extinction, desertification, ozone depletion, and alarming levels of water contamination
and scarcity are part of a long list of crises that have their origins in one thing—economic
activity that increasingly raids the world’s stores of "natural capital"
and pollutes and degrades everything in its path. The message emerging from the
critique of growth is loud and clear—human civilization must quickly put a check
on economic expansion and allow the ecosystems to repair themselves before it is
too late. Indisputably true, but what can unions do? Workers are, of course, part
of the very economy that seems to be causing the environmental problems, both as
producers and consumers. How can unions, even in theory, be against economic growth?
And unions and workers do not feature much in the talk about an ecological post-growth
society (the few eco-socialist writers being the exception). The overuse of insipid
terms like "green jobs" cannot hide the fact that the ecological crisis
is not on the agenda of the U.S. labor movement. And those who raise ecological
issues are likely to be reminded that labor is too embroiled in a struggle for its
own survival to have much time and energy to commit to planetary survival. However,
labor has much to gain by addressing, rather than avoiding, the ecological crisis
and its causes—many of the solutions would help, rather than harm, unions and workers.
Green Capitalism and Ecological Modernization
Thus far, unions that have been engaged in ecological issues (mostly outside the
U.S.) have tried to repackage growth as part of a green economic agenda, looking
at growth the way an internist would read a patient’s cholesterol levels.
Just as there is good and bad cholesterol, there is good growth (the "real"
economy, green investments, rebuilding infrastructure) and bad growth (financial
speculation, asset bubbles, etc.).
But what is green growth, exactly? The world’s leading green growth theorist
and spokesperson is probably former World Bank chief economist, Sir Nicholas Stern.
In 2006, Stern authored a major study on the economics of climate change, known
as the Stern Review, which rejected the idea that growth must inevitably lead to
more emissions and ecological stress. Human civilization does not have to learn
to get by with less, he says, nor does capitalism itself need to be fundamentally
restructured. Low carbon production and environmentally-friendly growth is technically
possible. All we need to do now is make it a political reality. This perspective,
known as "ecological modernization," rests on the premise that technological
and other efficiencies can "dematerialize" economic activity. We can get
more output from fewer material inputs, thus decoupling economic growth from environmental
damage. Perhaps the main policy plank in the platform of ecological modernization
is the pricing of externalities like carbon dioxide and other pollutants. Once priced,
the markets will work their magic and the economy can keep growing indefinitely.
Government is important, but only as an enabler of green economic activity and not
in any direct command-in-control sense. Unions, globally, have operated on the premise
that the real-world historical options are essentially twofold. Either humanity
will transition to some form of green capitalism, or we will face a "suicide
capitalism" scenario where fossil-fuel corporations and major industrial, agricultural,
transportation, and retail interests are successful in extending "business
as usual" past the point of no return. The former allows space for unions;
the latter does not. Unions have therefore generally accepted Stern’s green
growth perspective and are, whether truly conscious of it or not, ecological modernizers.
However, unions question whether private markets can drive green growth, and they
have sought to move the debate toward a global Green New Deal (GND) through which
governments—supported by labor—play a leading role, particularly in setting emissions
targets and timetables. In a similar vein, many U.S. unions support Obama-initiated
green investments and a green industrial policy as a means to restore both U.S.
competitiveness and its manufacturing base. This was the message of the Apollo Alliance
and it is now the main message of its successor organization, the
Blue-Green Alliance. It is also
the message of the mainstream environmental "Big Green" organizations.
The green growth perspective therefore dominates the trade union discourse, both
domestically and internationally.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 10-14, Winter 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/11 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000003
The Assault from the Right
Tea Party America and the Born-Again Politics of the Populist
Right
By Darren Dochuk
On August 6, 2011, thirty thousand evangelicals gathered in Houston’s Reliant
Stadium for a time of prayer, preaching, fasting, and singing. The event planner’s
hopes for a momentous turnout were fulfilled. Performers petitioned God for help
in rebuilding society and, with each plea, intensity grew. The crescendo came when
the event planner—Texas Governor Rick Perry—appeared. With the gestures of a preacher—head
bowed, hands clasped, and voice reverberating—the governor beseeched divine authority.
"Father," he entreated, "our hearts break for America….We have forgotten
who made us, who protects us, who blesses us, and for that, we cry out for your
forgiveness." Perry delivered scripted biblical injunctions, yet his listeners
knew that politics were at stake. As one reporter surmised, by the close of the
revival it was clear that Perry’s crusade "had turned into something
bigger and more complicated: a righteous rollout for one of the latest-starting
presidential campaigns in recent history."
Perry’s extravaganza and the Tea Party movement that brokered his presidential
candidacy remind us that "born-again" politics are as potent as ever.
They are driven by a theology of small government, free enterprise, family values,
and Christian patriotism, and backed by a phalanx of politically charged churches,
corporations, and action committees. Baptists and Pentecostals who share Perry’s
gospel have found in the Tea Party a vehicle for mobilizing nationally. Thus far,
analysts have underappreciated the ecclesiastical weight behind this mobilization.
While still tending to see Perry’s Pentecostalism as a marginal force, they
have been prone to write off the Tea Party as an "extremist" faction "with
no adult supervision."
All the while they have explained this movement’s endurance as largely a secular
phenomenon driven by economic angst with only haphazard tie-ins to the church. Yet
the truth is that evangelical impulses inspire the Tea Party. And that same Tea
Party fundamentalism now "wags the dog" of the GOP.
This shift in the Republican Party’s center of gravity has been underway for
decades. Since the 1930s, in fact, evangelicals have sparked several "tea parties."
They have assembled over moral concerns certainly, but also over issues like taxation
and employment practices, labor rights, and government spending. In the face of
Franklin Roosevelt’s welfare programs, evangelical preachers and businessmen
excoriated the New Deal as an affront to sound Christian economics. They began articulating
a free enterprise doctrine, and quietly organized behind the scenes to roll back
Roosevelt’s Keynesianism and pro-labor policies. Strip bare the union of laissez-faire
capitalism and fundamentalist Christianity and replace it with a secular, bureaucratic
state, they warned, and one was sure to see the dismantling of an entire ethic based
on individual responsibility to family, church, community, commerce, and—above all—God.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 17-23, Wall 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/11 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000004
The Assault from the Right
The Right-to-Work Offensive: Tracking the Spread of the Anti-Union
Virus
By Peter Rachleff
The Republican victories in the 2010 midterm elections led to a new round of challenges
to the long-beleaguered U.S. labor movement. Not only did Republicans gain a substantial
majority of House seats and reduce the Democrats’ majority in the Senate to
a bare handful—they also took control of twenty-five state legislatures (the Democrats
dominate sixteen, and another nine legislatures are split) and twenty-nine governors’
chairs. These victories set the stage for a new round of Republican-led attacks
on trade unionism, with Democratic compliance more often the case than not. Some
observers have warned that they could "drive a stake into the heart of what
is left of organized labor."
But they have also generated new activism from within the ranks of the labor movement—an
activism that might provide the basis for a long-overdue resurgence.
For three-plus decades, major employers and their political representatives have
strategically tried to reduce labor organizations’ economic and political
clout. While 30 percent of the private sector workforce was once unionized, barely
7 percent of private sector workers hold union cards today. This decline in density
has brought a decline in economic power, from the workplace to the bargaining table,
and a similar decline in political influence, even among labor’s former "allies"
in the Democratic Party.
Like sharks smelling blood in the water, Republicans seem incited by labor’s
diminished influence. However, their seemingly decentralized, state-by-state attacks
are anything but spontaneous—they are fueled by a shared perspective and agenda.
Conservative think tanks and funders have produced draft bills, conducted workshops
for new legislators, and poured huge sums of money into advertising, taking advantage
of the
Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision. Their arguments
have relied on cries of a "fiscal crisis" faced by each state (states,
unlike the federal government, are required to balance their budgets), an unwillingness
to raise taxes, and an insistence that cuts to labor costs and services are the
only way to balance budgets. Public employees’ right to collective bargaining
is painted as a structural obstacle to this agenda. Another dimension to this argument
has been the notion that such a course of action will generate economic growth,
which has in turn fed the idea that undermining the power of unions—in both the
private sector and the public sector—is the foundation of a pro-growth, jobs creation-driven
public policy. And so the shibboleth of right-to-work legislation has reared its
ugly head.
This Republican offensive has unfolded on a state-by-state basis. Wisconsin’s
governor, Scott Walker, led the way in January 2011, when he introduced his "budget
repair" bill, stripping public employee unions of the right to collectively
bargain over wages and benefits, requiring them to collect dues member by member,
and ordering them to hold an annual election to renew their diminished legal status.
In Indiana, Governor Mitch Daniels—who, in 2005, used his executive power to take
collective bargaining rights away from public employees—called for bills that would
cut teachers’ wages and benefits and reduce public employees’ rights
even further. In Ohio, John Kasich—whose resume includes stints in the House of
Representatives and as a Fox News broadcaster—promised to "break the back of
labor unions in the public schools" and introduced Senate Bill 5 (SB5), which
took collective bargaining rights away from teachers, firefighters, and other public
employees, proscribed strikes, and gave state bureaucrats the right to mandate terms
of employment. The Michigan legislature handed its new governor, Rick Snyder, the
power to declare any municipality in default and appoint a fiscal receiver, who
could nullify union contracts, cut wages and benefits, and contract out work.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 22-29, Winter 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/11 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000005
The Assault from the Right
The Feminization of Austerity
By Mimi Abramovitz
The current attack on public sector unions is the latest step in a long-term effort
to “end big government” through a three–pronged strategy that
falls heavily on women. The strategy targets three public sector groups: service
users, workers, andunions. Yet most of the prevailing analysis focuses on one group
or another and thus misses the whole story and the strategy’s wider impact,
particularly on white women and women of color—the people who comprise the
majority of public sector program users, workers, and union members. This is largely a result of the gender
division of labor that still assigns most “care work” to women, including
the type of care work that remains embedded in many public sector jobs.
The Wider Context: Thirty Years of Neoliberalism
The strategy to dismantle the public sector is not new or accidental. It emerged
as part of the wider neoliberal response to the economic crisis of the 1970s, and
relies on the calculated use of what Naomi Klein has called the “shock doctrine”
to win support for otherwise unpopular ideas.
Over the course of the last thirty years, U.S. leaders have pursued a policy agenda
variously referred to as Reaganomics, supply-side economics, or neoliberalism. Designed
to redistribute income upwards and shrink the state, the now familiar tactics include:
reducing taxes paid by corporations and wealthy individuals, and otherwise eviscerating
the progressivity of the tax code; slashing the budgets of public programs that
served—and, at times, emboldened—the poor and the working class; shifting
government services to the private sector; deregulating businesses, banks, and labor
markets. At the same time, the “reformers” worked to end consumer, workplace,
and environmental protections; devolve federal responsibility for public programs
to the states; and weaken the power of social movementsby reversing their gains.
Meanwhile, the right called for the restoration of family values and a color-blind
social order.
More recently, conservatives have drawn on the shock doctrine to invigorate their
anti-public sector campaign, buoyed by the 2008 economic collapse, conservative
electoral victories, and the Democrats’ failure to present an alternative
narrative. Having created a budget crisis by refusing to raise taxes for more than
a decade, elected officials knowingly exploited deficit fears to win support for
more tax and budget cuts and for highlighting deficit reduction rather than job
creation. They sealed the deal by using the race, welfare-queen, gay marriage, and/or
immigration cards to convince people to vote for measures that undermined their
economic security and the common good. The politics of fear and hate have kept people
divided, blinded to their shared interests, and—until recently—demobilized.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 30-39, Winter 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/11 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000006
Europe’s Political Nightmare: Why the Christian and Social
Democratic Parties Have Surrendered to the Bond Market
By Jordan Stancil
As Europe’s debt crisis deepened throughout 2011, it became clear that the
Old World had become the bastion of the most hidebound financial orthodoxy, willing
to force millions of its citizens to suffer years of reduced living standards in
the name of debt repayment. In order to please financial markets, international
public lenders engineered a deep recession in Greece as other countries enacted
contractionary budget cuts. The rush to austerity—as well as the stubborn persistence
in it, even as growth slowed to a crawl in 2011—presented a puzzle for Americans
who had believed Europe’s political spectrum to be several notches to the
left of their own. Now it seemed Europe was insisting on the suffering of the many
in order to save the profits of the few, and even effective popular resistance was
lacking. How could this be explained?
Both the choice of austerity and the lack of effective resistance to it had roots
in the political and intellectual universe of pre-recession Europe. The issue was
not how Europe responded to the recession and financial crisis, but why it lacked
the means to respond in any other way. There were four main factors. First, a new
type of conservative party, which disavowed postwar Christian Democracy’s
concerns about markets, had been in the ascendant for several years and was in power
in the main countries. Second, the Socialist and Social Democratic parties had long
ago ceased to pay more than lip service to the notions of social justice and the
public interest, and had suffered a commensurate loss of credibility and intellectual
vigor. Third, national identity and immigration displaced class and social equality
as the main political issues. Fourth, regardless of the first three factors, the
institutions of the
European Union
(EU) made progressive change virtually impossible by moving economic governance
far outside the reach of popular politics and requiring, by treaty, that member
states reduce public deficits and debt. Indeed, Europe’s main institutional
response to the crisis was to strengthen enforcement of these rules, making them
even more rigid than they had been before.
The Conservative Parties in Charge
The welfare states of postwar Europe were built and sustained by a bargain between
conservative Christian Democratic parties on the right and Socialist or Social Democratic
parties on the left. Conservative parties in the postwar period were attuned to
what they saw as the dangers of exploitation, disruption of family life, and other
forms of immorality inherent in capitalism. Far from promoting the commercial ethos
as the organizing principle of society, these parties did not deny that there was
a tension between that ethos and the parties’ own Christian values. Thus,
even if these parties were socially anchored in the business class, they were not
"free-market" parties in the contemporary sense. In addition to their
programmatic skepticism toward markets, they concerned themselves with preventing
a return to the socioeconomic disorders of the interwar period—and the political
extremism that followed. As the historian Tony Judt put it, "The very term
‘social security’ . . . became a universal shorthand for prophylactic institutions
designed to avert any return to the interwar catastrophe."
This ideology no longer applies to the conservative parties that govern the
largest European countries today. Center-right parties like Angela Merkel’s
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) in Germany and Nicolas Sarkozy’s Union pour
un Mouvement Populaire (UMP) in France have left their hang-ups about the market
behind them. In the rhetoric and the programs of these parties, competition and
individualism are no longer seen as posing problems for Christian values and social
peace. The accumulation and investment of wealth are no longer activities about
which one should be, at best, morally ambivalent. Instead, they are celebrated by
center-right parties.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 41-46, Winter 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/11 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000007
What We Don’t Talk About When We Talk About Jobs: The Continuing
Scandal of African-American Joblessness
By Andy Kroll
*This article first appeared at TomDispatch.com.
Like the country it governs, Washington is a city of extremes. In a car, you can
zip in bare moments from northwest District of Columbia, its streets lined with
million-dollar homes and palatial embassies, its inhabitants sporting one of the
nation’s lowest jobless rates, to Anacostia, a mostly forgotten neighborhood
in southeastern D.C. with one of the highest unemployment rates anywhere in America.
Or, if you happen to be jobless, upset about it, and living in that neighborhood,
on a crisp morning last March you could have joined an angry band of protesters
marching on the nearby 11th Street Bridge.
They weren’t looking for trouble. They were looking for work.
Those protesters, most of them black, chanted and hoisted signs that read "D.C.
JOBS FOR D.C. RESIDENTS" and "JOBS OR ELSE." The target of their
outrage: contractors hired to replace the very bridge under their feet, a $300 million
project that will be one of the largest in District history.
The problem: few D.C. citizens, which means few African-Americans, had so far been
hired. "It’s deplorable," insisted civil rights attorney Donald
Temple, "that . . . you can find men from West Virginia to work in D.C. You
can find men from Maryland to work in D.C. And you can find men from Virginia to
work in D.C. But you can’t find men and women in D.C. to work in D.C."
The 11th Street Bridge arches over the slow-flowing Anacostia River, connecting
the poverty stricken, largely black Anacostia neighborhood with the rest of the
District. By foot the distance is small; in opportunity and wealth, it couldn’t
be larger. At one end of the bridge the economy is booming even amid a halting recovery
and jobs crisis. At the other end, hard times, always present, are worse than ever.
Live in Washington long enough and you’ll hear someone mention "east
of the river." That’s D.C.’s version of "the other side of
the tracks," the place friends warn against visiting late at night or on your
own. It’s home to District Wards 7 and 8, neighborhoods with a long, rich
history. Once known as Uniontown, Anacostia was one of the District’s first
suburbs; Frederick Douglass, nicknamed the "Sage of Anacostia," once lived
there, as did the poet Ezra Pound and singer Marvin Gaye. Today the area’s
unemployment rate is 20 percent and, in some pockets, even higher. District-wide, it’s 10.8 percent, a figure that drops
as low as 3.6 percent in the whiter, more affluent northwestern suburbs.
D.C.’s divide is America’s writ large. Nationwide, the unemployment
rate for black workers at 16.7 percent
is almost double the 9.1 percent rate for the rest of the population. And it’s
twice the 8 percent white
jobless rate.
The size of those numbers can, in part, be chalked up to the current jobs crisis
in which black workers are being decimated. According to
Duke University public policy expert William Darity, that means blacks are
"the last to be hired in a good economy, and when there’s a downturn,
they’re the first to be released."
That may account for the soaring numbers of unemployed African-Americans, but not
the yawning chasm between the black and white employment rates, which is no artifact
of the present moment. It’s a problem that spans generations, goes remarkably
unnoticed, and condemns millions of black Americans to a life of scraping by. That
unerring, unchanging gap between white and black employment figures goes back at
least sixty years. It should be a scandal, but whether on Capitol Hill or in the
media it gets remarkably little attention. Ever.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 49-55, Winter 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/11 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000008
Let’s Talk About the Jobs Gap: A Response to Andy Kroll
By Arlene Holt Baker
Andy Kroll has sounded the alarm on the severity of today’s jobs crisis for
African-Americans. But more importantly, he has reminded us of the historical persistence
of a black unemployment rate that’s double that of white unemployment, and
that continues to undermine economic advancement for millions of people in our country.
Mr. Kroll points out that, as we look for ways to address the economic crisis facing
our nation, the debate virtually ignores the particularly destructive impact that
prolonged unemployment and growing inequality are having on entire communities,
affecting the stability of future generations. He is absolutely right. More must
be done to acknowledge and respond to the stark disparities that still exist in
the richest nation on the planet.
Much has been said about the causes of the current global economic crisis. And although
the economic collapse was not caused by working people, the unemployed, retirees,
or the poor, they are the ones most impacted by the loss of jobs, foreclosures,
and lost wealth. This is especially true for African-American workers. According
to a recent report from the
Pew Research
Center, in 2009 "the median wealth of white households is twenty times
that of black households and eighteen times that of Hispanic households." This represents the largest
wealth gap on record, and it is completely unacceptable.
There is an analogy that is often used to describe the economic situation for black
America that basically says "if the economy is the engine of the train, it
doesn’t matter how fast or slow it’s moving, African-Americans are always
in the caboose, never catching up." Now it feels like the caboose is becoming
detached from the train.
It used to be that African-Americans employed in industries like auto, steel, and
manufacturing were considered to have
good jobs that paid decent wages
and provided benefits, thanks to collective bargaining. And because of their unions,
workers could be confident that they had a voice on the job and that their rights
would be protected. These types of jobs helped many African-Americans improve their
standard of living and simultaneously created stronger communities. Despite this
progress, it wasn’t enough to bridge the jobs gap.
Over time, as our manufacturing sector declined—the result of a globalized economy
based on offshoring, attacks on collective bargaining, and employers’ pursuit
of a low-wage workforce—African-Americans lost a lot of good jobs. And while there
has been some rebound in manufacturing, significant damage has already been done.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 56-58, Winter 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/11 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000009
Mobilizing the Unorganized: Is "Working America" the
Way Forward?
By Amy Dean
Given the dramatic decline of union membership, the U.S. labor movement needs to
reach out to a broader base of working- and middle-class Americans. Now more than
ever, nonunion workers need an advocate, within both the economic and political
realms.
This idea is at the heart of Working America, a national initiative established
in 2003 as the "community affiliate of the AFL-CIO."
Working America now claims more than
three million members. Eight years after its creation, the organization has demonstrated
some impressive capabilities; but, at the same time, it raises questions about the
limitations of labor’s vision in using community outreach and organizing to
build an inclusive base of power.
Working America has been successful as an independent political operation in battleground
states. But unless unions address the challenge of forming a common agenda in realms
that go beyond narrow electoral campaigning or political issue advocacy, and unless
they are willing to invest in reviving labor’s local infrastructure, efforts
to reach out to a constituency wider than the movement’s dues-paying members
will continue to be constrained.
Creating a Battleground Canvass
Ideas that laid the groundwork for Working America initially developed in the1980s
out of a discussion about how federations like the AFL-CIO could reestablish themselves
as bodies representing the interests of all working people in the country. Economists—including
Harvard’s Richard Freeman—recommended developing an "associate membership"
program, and the AFL-CIO’s Committee on the Evolution of Work propelled the
idea with its 1985 report, "The Changing Situation of Workers and Their Unions."
Subsequently, through the 1990s and 2000s, labor leaders recognized that reversing
a declining rate of overall unionization needed to be a priority; but they also
recognized that labor needed to be able to establish a base of support that went
beyond dues-paying members covered under collective bargaining agreements.
By 2003, electoral politics emerged as an arena in which labor should reach beyond
its membership base to represent working-class communities. The electoral operations
of affiliate unions had grown more sophisticated than ever before. Labor field campaigns
demonstrated that they could create very high turnouts among their members, and
that—when organized—approximately 70 percent of members would vote for candidates
endorsed by their organization. This represented an historic high—but it also appeared
as something of a limitation, given the declining rate of unionization. Thus, both
the ability as well as the need to reach out to a broader base was clear.
To take the success of labor’s existing voter outreach and replicate it among
nonunion members, Working America established a door-to-door canvass in electoral
battleground states including Ohio, Pennsylvania, Minnesota, Michigan, Florida,
and New Mexico. The organization targeted moderates and swing voters, especially
members of the white working-class who, starting with the "Reagan Democrats"
of the 1980s, had been the first to flee the Democratic Party. Dues would be voluntary,
as the organization sought to reach out to the largest possible base. The question,
says Working America Executive Director Karen Nussbaum, was whether this constituency
could "be part of a sphere of influence" the same way that union members
were?
New Labor Forum 21(1): 61-69, Winter 2012
Copyright @ Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/12 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000010
Florence Kelley: Pioneer of Labor Reform
By Peter Dreier
*The following biographical sketch is an excerpt from the author’s
The 100 Greatest Americans of the 20th Century: A Social Justice Hall of Fame, to
be published by Nation Books in the spring of 2012.
In 1871, William Kelley took his twelve-year-old daughter Florence on a tour so
she’d appreciate the wonders of America’s new industrial age. The father
was mesmerized by a Western Pennsylvania steel mill’s new Bessemer converter
(a huge fiery cauldron which turned molten pig iron into steel) and a glass factory’s
assembly-line operation for making bottles.
But Florence was more shocked than impressed. Touring the steel mill at two in the
morning, she recalled, she witnessed the "terrifying sight" of "boys
smaller than myself" carrying heavy pails of drinking water for men. These
little boys, Kelley thought, "were not more important than so many grains of
sand in the molds." At the glass factory, she observed that "[t]he only
light was the glare from the furnaces." A glass blower stood in front of each
furnace. Near each blower were the "dogs," as the boys were called, whose
jobs were to clean and scrape bottle molds, a tedious and dangerous task in the
dark and hot factory.
Kelley never forgot these images, or her impression "of the utter unimportance
of children compared with products, in the minds of the people whom I am among."
As an adult, Kelley did more than any other twentieth-century American to rectify
the awful conditions of child labor. She was also a leading organizer against sweatshops
and a pioneering advocate for working women. She helped lead the battle for groundbreaking
local, state, and federal labor laws, including the ones that established the minimum
wage and the eight-hour day. Kelley was a pathbreaker in conducting social and statistical
research to expose workplace abuses and in developing strategies—such as factory
inspections and consumer organizing—to pressure state legislatures and Congress
to improve working conditions. As a radical and a socialist, she viewed the struggle
for workplace reform as part of the broader battle for social justice and played
important roles in the feminist, civil rights, peace, and labor movements of her
time.
Kelley believed that women with her class privilege had a moral duty to advocate
for laws to protect workers, women, and children from the often brutal conditions
of unregulated capitalism. "We that are strong," she wrote as a young
woman, "let us bear the infirmities of the weak."
Kelley was brought up in an activist family. Her father, William—an abolitionist
and a founder of the Republican Party in 1854—served fifteen terms as a U.S. Congressman
from Philadelphia and was a champion of high wages for working men. Her great-aunt,
Sarah Pugh, was a Quaker and an opponent of slavery. Her refusal to use cotton and
sugar because they were made with slave labor made an early impression on Florence.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 71-76, Winter 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/11 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000011
Working-Class Voices of Contemporary America
Working on the Railroad, Walking in Beauty: The Voices of Navajo
Railroad Workers
By Jay Youngdahl
*This essay is adapted from the author’s recently published book,
Working on the Railroad, Walking in Beauty (Utah State University Press, 2011).
Since 1993, the author has worked with and interviewed Navajo railroad workers in
Arizona and New Mexico.
Those who drive along Interstate 40 from Albuquerque, New Mexico through northern
Arizona and into the Southern California desert are treated to a rainbow of colors
in the mesas and through the mountains. They encounter the Grand Canyon, the Petrified
Forest, a stunning descent into the canyon of the Colorado River, and the subtle
variations of a cactused landscape. While the beauty delights travelers, this natural
view is often interrupted by the consistent stream of trains—owned by Warren Buffett’s
Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad—rolling
over the double-tracked rails that parallel much of the highway. If you drive past
these rails, you’ll often see large gangs of men—some working with hand tools,
others operating machinery—maintaining the rails so the tracks can absorb the constant
pounding that the trains dish out. Travelers in the Southwest often don’t
know that many, if not most, of these men are Navajos. The Navajo Nation, occupying
a landmass north of these tracks that’s nearly the size of the state of West
Virginia, has been their home for roughly seven hundred years. Nearly a quarter
million Navajos live here.
Railroad work has been one of the only forms of continuous wage labor available
to Navajo men since their return to this reservation after the infamous U.S. government-enforced
"Long Walk" of the 1860s. While Navajos and the Western railroads have
a constant connection, an upsurge in Navajo railroad employment began after World
War II, when companies were forced to send Mexican "bracero" workers home.
In order to supply labor to the railroads a paternalistic triangle was formed. It
was comprised of the U.S. government, mainly represented by the
Railroad Retirement Board, an obscure federal
agency based in Chicago; the Western railroad companies; and the owners of the trading
posts that dotted the reservation. The Navajos had no say in the arrangement. Leroy
Yazzie Sr., a pleasant sixty-year-old man with a sparkling Navajo sense of humor,
found work on the railroads through his trading post. He got his job on the Rock
Island Railroad after talking to a trader at the local trading post who told him
to "round up some Navajos." Leroy found some men willing to go work at
the railroad. All of the Navajo men got in the back of a pick-up truck and the trader
drove them to the embarkation site.
Railroad work is generally dangerous and, with few exceptions, Navajos are offered
only the most difficult work on the major Western railways—track maintenance. Injuries
are commonplace, as track work is still performed much as it was well over one hundred
years ago. So, to this day, after the snow begins to melt in the spring, Navajo
men leave their reservation and travel between the Pacific Ocean and the Mississippi
River, in gangs of up to one hundred, maintaining and replacing aging railroad tracks.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 77-81, Winter 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/11 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000012
Economic Prospects
By Robert Pollin
Fighting Seriously for Jobs and Social Security
As the severe unemployment crisis drags into its third year, proposals for solving
the crisis are proliferating. Even more ideas will be tossed into the mix as the
2012 election season intensifies.
Some of these proposals are good, some are less good, and some are truly awful.
The plan offered by President Obama last September included a mix of some good ideas,
such as more spending on infrastructure and education, along with some bad ones,
like cutting Social Security taxes (otherwise known as payroll taxes). The single
worst idea in the mix, supported by deficit hawks in both the Democratic and Republican
parties, is that we are facing a fiscal train wreck and we therefore, above all,
need to cut government spending. At the same time, there are actually some major
avenues still open for stimulating job creation—both because they could create lots
of jobs relatively quickly and because they could do so cheaply—that most policymakers
and politicians have thus far ignored.
There Is No Federal Debt Crisis
The official debate over the economy shifted decisively last summer, away from proposals
for job creation to obsessing over the size of the federal government’s deficit
(how much we are borrowing each year) and debt (how much we owe overall). The federal
deficit has, indeed, been historically large since the recession began, running
at about 10 percent of GDP for the past three years, as opposed to the historic
average of 2 percent of GDP. But that is only because the jobs crisis itself is
of historic magnitude. Solving the unemployment crisis would accomplish far more
than any other measure toward bringing the federal deficit down. This is simply
because when more people have jobs, they also pay more taxes and rely less on government
support, such as unemployment insurance and Medicaid. There is another point to
emphasize here. Despite the historically large fiscal deficits, the federal government
is now paying interest on the total outstanding debt at a rate that is historically
low, not high. This is for the simple reason that the interest rates on U.S. Treasury
bonds are themselves at historic lows, at around 2 percent. As such, while it is
true that the government will need to reduce its borrowing once the recession is
behind us, there is no immediate crisis whatsoever in terms of the government paying
off the debt obligations it faces now or over the next few years.
Cutting Social Security Taxes As a Jobs Program Is
Perilous
Since its inception in 1939, the political right in the U.S. has been trying to
kill Social Security. These efforts have failed up until now because the program
has maintained overwhelming political support. The enduring popularity of Social
Security follows from the fact that, over seventy-two years, it has succeeded in
reducing poverty for retired people and those with disabilities, and has done so
at minimal administrative expense. The 2011 cut in the payroll tax, from 6.2 percent
to 4.2 percent, that applied to workers is costing the system $112 billion, or 15
percent of total expected revenues for this year. Obama’s proposal for 2012
would reduce the rate further, which could bring the overall loss of funds for Social
Security to more than 25 percent of committed outlays for 2012. The Obama administration
says that the lost Social Security revenues resulting from the payroll tax cuts
will be replenished from general revenues. It is no doubt sincere in this intention.
But cutting the traditional source of Social Security revenues, even temporarily,
entails compromising the principle that Social Security is a self-financed, stand-alone
program, whose funding is inviolate. If funding for Social Security starts being
treated regularly in the same manner as all other government programs, it then becomes
vulnerable to the types of attacks that have already occurred over the past year
with public education, public safety, and pension programs for state-level workers.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 82-85, Winter 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/11 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000013
Roots of Rebellion
Traitors to Their Class
By Peter Dreier and Chuck Collins
The Occupy Wall Street movement has challenged the privilege of the richest Americans,
but a handful of people within the top 1 percent support the movement’s goals
of redistributing wealth and power. They are part of a proud tradition of wealthy
people who found common cause with the poor, the working class, and progressive
movements for social justice.
For more than a century, most philanthropy—made possible by federal laws that provide
tax breaks in exchange for charitable giving—has ignored progressive movements.
Instead, it has focused on giving to elite institutions, such as museums, symphonies,
private universities that primarily serve affluent students, and land conservancies
around private estates. When philanthropists and foundations donate to the poor,
it is primarily to institutions that provide services and handouts—such as homeless
shelters and soup kitchens—not organizations that mobilize people to challenge the
status quo. Understandably, most philanthropy by the rich has not been concerned
with challenging the economic and political system.
Throughout American history, however, a small number of rich radicals and prosperous
progressives has donated money to keep the Left and its organizations going. Motivated
by religious and secular views about slavery, women’s rights, racial bigotry,
peace, poverty, and labor—and impressed by the courage and commitment of activists—they
invested their hearts and their money in movements for change.
For example, a group that called itself the "Secret Six" funded much of
the movement to end slavery. These wealthy abolitionists helped elect Charles Sumner
to Congress, funded William Lloyd Garrison’s newspaper (the Liberator),
supported the work of Frederick Douglass, and secretly financed John Brown’s
anti-slavery organizing, including his attempted insurrection at Harpers Ferry in
1859.
In the late 1800s and early 1900s, many wealthy benefactors—mostly women like Jane
Addams, who founded the settlement house movement—contributed their time, talent,
and money to the Progressive Era battle against slums and sweatshops.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 86-91, Winter 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/11 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000014
In the Rearview Mirror
By Steve Fraser and Joshua B. Freeman
Uncle Sam Does(n’t) Want You
Ventura, California not long ago passed an ordinance making it okay for the unemployed
and homeless to sleep in their cars. At the height of the Great Recession, a third
of the capital equipment of the U.S. economy lay idle. Of the women and men idled
along with that equipment, only 37 percent got any unemployment checks from the
government and that money averaged a mere 35 percent of their weekly wages. Meanwhile,
"ninety-niners," those who have maxed out their supplemental unemployment
benefits because they’ve been out of work for more than ninety-nine weeks,
now number two million. They comprise a division in "the reserve army of labor."
That "army" which accounts for 17 percent of the labor force (if one includes
part-time workers who want full-time work and those millions who’ve given
up looking for jobs) is doing its historic duty, driving down wages, lengthening
hours, eroding conditions, and adding an element of raw fear to the lives of those
still lucky enough to be working.
The co-existence of idling workplaces and cast-off workers always has been the most
severe indictment of capitalism as a system for the reproduction of human society.
The coming into existence of a new social category—the "ninety-niners"—punctuates
that grim observation. As recently as the 1930s, the numbing, demoralizing experience
of year after year after year without work caused people to wonder if capitalism
had outlived its usefulness. Nowadays, however, the "ninety-niners" notwithstanding,
unemployment has been normalized; not a good thing, of course, but not something
that all by itself causes us to question the way the economy is organized.
There was a time when unemployment was so shocking and traumatic that it led people
to do just that. We don’t use the phrase "reserve army of labor"
anymore. It strikes many as faintly embarrassing, too "Marxist" or perhaps
anachronistic in the age of post-industrial flexible capitalism when we’ve
supposedly grown accustomed to the casualness and transience of work. But long before
leftists began throwing it around, that redolent metaphor, the "reserve army
of labor," was regularly referred to, studied, and worried about by nineteenth-century
journalists, government bureaucrats, town fathers, state governors, churchmen, and
other citizens. Something new was happening and they weren’t entirely sure
what to make of it.
Unemployment, as a recurring feature on the social landscape, only emerged with
the advent of capitalism in antebellum America. Before that, the rhythms of agricultural
and village life naturally included oscillations between periods of intense labor
and down time. But the wherewithal to sustain families remained within the possession
of farmers and handicraftsmen. Hard times were common enough, but except in extremis
most people retained enough of their own land and tools, as well as common rights
to woodlands, grazing areas, hunting, and fishing resources to keep themselves what
today we might call "self-employed." Once these means of subsistence and
production became concentrated in the hands of merchant-capitalists, manufacturers,
and large landowners, the situation changed fundamentally. A proletariat—those without
property of any kind except their own labor power—appeared in increasing numbers,
dependent on the propertied to employ them. If, for whatever reason, the market
for their labor power dried up, they were set adrift.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 92-97, Winter 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/11 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000015
Caught in the Web
By Liza Featherstone
Economics of Immigration
Debate over immigration is a thicket of misinformation and irrational, uninformed
opinions. Fear and racism are constantly masquerading as political and economic
analysis. One of the best places on the web to turn to for solid facts on the subject
is the Immigration Policy Center (IPC)—www.immigrationpolicy.org—based in Washington,
D.C. There is a "Just the Facts" section (www.immigrationpolicy.org/just-facts)
that provides statistics on migration, analyzes the relationship between immigration
and job growth, and explains the impact of the
Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) on immigrants. The IPC also has a fine map
of the United States (
www.immigrationpolicy.org/just-facts/immigration-by-state)
that will tell you—with a touch of the browser—how many immigrants are in each state
and how many of them are naturalized citizens. The IPC site also provides links
to the group’s useful research reports, such as a study (
www.immigrationpolicy.org/sites/default/files/docs/ca_immigration.pdf)
co-authored with the
Center
for American Progress (CAP)—a center-left Washington, D.C. think tank—analyzing
the economic consequences, for the state of California, of legalizing immigrants
who are presently undocumented instead of deporting them. The IPC and CAP found
that while legalizing immigrants had considerable economic benefits for California,
mass deportation would be economically disastrous for the state, with devastating
effects on employment, productivity, and tax revenues. The same two groups did a
similar study showing how Arizona’s anti-immigrant legislation has hurt that
state’s economy (
www.americanprogress.org/issues/2011/03/pdf/rising_tide_exec_summ.pdf),
as well as another showing how immigration reform could raise wages for all American
workers (
www.americanprogress.org/issues/2010/01/raising_the_floor.html).
For the business world’s pro-immigration take, it’s also worth tracking
the work of Immigration Works USA (
www.immigrationworksusa.org),
which advances progressive immigration policies supported by business elites who
want to benefit from immigrant labor. The organization is a coalition of business
groups in twenty-five states. One of the best resources on the site is a page devoted
to the "Economics of Immigration" (
www.immigrationworksusa.org/index.php?p=90),
which compiles myth-busting on immigration from groups like the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce (immigrants do
not take jobs from Americans, they create new jobs) and the
Brookings Institution (immigration raises the overall standards of living
for all Americans). The page is rich with links to studies showing patterns of immigration;
that migration to the United States is on a sharp decline, for instance, and how
many Mexican migrants come versus how many leave. Other links show the economic
impact of immigrant workers in twenty-five U.S. metropolitan areas, and states as
varied as Minnesota, Oregon, North Carolina, Arizona, Texas, and Washington. The
page also links to useful studies from the University of California, the
Congressional Budget Office, and the
Migration Policy Institute, all
exploring the more controversial area of the labor market effects of immigrant workers—do
they affect the wages and employment levels of native-born workers, and if so how?
Sure, these business groups want to ensure a steady stream of workers, who—in some
cases—they may wish to egregiously exploit. But the data, and the arguments, are
still useful to immigrant workers and their advocates.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 98-101, Winter 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/11 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000016
Books and the Arts
The Future Doesn’t Work
Someplace Like America: Tales from the New Great
Depression
By Dale Maharidge (photographs by Michael S. Williamson)
University of California Press, 2011
Reviewed by Connie Schultz
In September 1995, journalist Dale Maharidge wrote an epitaph for his own career.
He and photographer Michael S. Williamson had produced three books in the 1980s
about American poverty and the working class: Journey to Nowhere, And Their Children
After Them, and The Last Great American Hobo. When an editor at
Gale Research Inc. asked him to describe their work covering the destitute lives
of so many Americans, Maharidge confessed that the reporting had taken a lot out
of them:
Perhaps one can never understand [poverty]. All I know is that each book took a
chunk out of our lives. One sets out to educate Americans about poverty in the hope
that in some small way conditions will be changed. Then comes the realization that
Americans don’t seem to care. This, along with the horror of the lives one
documents, takes a toll. I can’t speak for Michael, but I plan to never again
write a non-fiction book about poverty (p. 74).
Maharidge broke his own vow, and his latest collaboration with Williamson, Someplace
Like America: Tales from the New Great Depression, asks a difficult but
essential question for Americans today: "what do we want to become as we move
forward?" (p. 10).
Someplace Like America expands on some of Maharidge and Williamson’s
earlier stories and updates some of the tales of desperate Americans they had met
in the 1980s. They got a creative jumpstart from Bruce Springsteen, who reached
out to them after reading one of their books and then wrote two songs based on it.
In the process, it connects the economic struggles of the ‘70s and ‘80s, when poverty
and homelessness were clearly tied to factory closings, with the current economic
crisis that levels white-collar workers who never imagined themselves unemployable,
standing in line at a food pantry, or jumping trains to find work.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 102-111, Winter 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/11 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000017
Books and the Arts
Inside the Black Box
A Shameful Business: The Case for Human Rights
in the American Workplace
By James A. Gross
Cornell University Press, 2010
Reviewed by Ellen Dannin
These days, much of politics and values in the United States gets filtered through
the views of the right-to-life movement. But when it comes to the right to have
a decent life, too many of our leaders are deaf and blind to taking action on the
desperate conditions of so many in this country. Among those pressing for change,
Cornell University’s James A. Gross has been a strong and consistent voice
for the "ought to be" of work.
Starting roughly a decade ago, Gross began exhorting us to bring worker rights under
the umbrella of human rights. His newest book, A Shameful Business: The Case for
Human Rights in the American Workplace, is the fruit of this vision. There
is no question which side he is on. The author’s voice is passionately present
in every line of every page. The book covers issues of race and human rights, the
ascension of market economic values over worker rights, the clash of property and
labor rights, and safety and health issues in the workplace. This book is a no-holds-barred
indictment of economic laissez-faire theory, its underpinnings, and its effects.
The title of Gross’s concluding chapter ("Crimes against Humanity: Concluding
Thoughts about Choosing Human Rights") best captures his position.
Gross covers intellectual and legal developments that most of us have forgotten
or never learned. For example, in his chapter on the triumph of the market economy,
Gross describes how law and power evolved during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
to support the structure of employment in the U.S. That evolution, under the influence
of capitalism, created a system in which the master-and-servant doctrine enforced
inequality, while claiming that employers and employees had reciprocal rights and
obligations. Here, and throughout the book, Gross shows how law has been used to
enforce the subordination of workers. Partnership law gives employers the power
to become a collective entity, and corporation law gives employers eternal life,
simply by filing legal documents. While employees can also become a collective entity,
that process is far riskier and more difficult than simply filing legal documents,
and its existence is under constant assault.
Gross puts this into an historical perspective, noting that "entrepreneurs,
characterized later by muckrakers as robber barons, needed to reconcile the values
they preached of the free individual competing in the atomistic free market with
the reality of concentrated corporate economic and political power" (p. 68).
He describes this condition as Darwinian power that has used Christian principles
to justify itself, as in Andrew Carnegie’s 1889 "The Gospel of Wealth."
"That was accomplished by combining Darwinian survival of the fittest theories
and Christian principles into a justification of wealth and power. Darwin and Jesus
were woven together and, in turn, interpreted through a combination of laws: the
Scientific Law of Competition and the divinely ordained Law of the accumulation
of Wealth" (p. 68). Gross questions why employers are allowed to have inherent
rights, while workers have none. Thus, although we talk about bargaining agreements,
the result, he says, can never be a bargain between equals.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 102-111, Winterl 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/12 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000018
Books and the Arts
What Happens When Care Workers Enter the Marketplace?
Intimate Labors: Cultures, Technologies, and the
Politics of Care
Edited by Eileen Boris and Rhacel Salazar Parreñas
Stanford University Press, 2010
Reviewed by Geraldine Gorman
An anthology devoted to the "cultures, technologies, and politics of care"
might not be a popular leisure reading choice, but Intimate Labors: Cultures, Technologies,
and the Politics of Care, edited by Eileen Boris and Rhacel Salazar Parreñas,
is an interesting and timely read. The idea for the anthology was conceived of during
a 2007 conference funded by a consortium of University of California departments,
institutes, and centers. All the contributors are women, which is befitting of a
collection described by its editors as situating the discussion "of intimate
labor in a feminist discussion of women’s work" (p. 5).
The opening line of the introduction establishes the anthology’s thesis: a
striking feature of contemporary capitalism "is the heightened commodification
of intimacy that pervades social life." Boris and Parreñas consider a continuum
that includes the categories of "care, sex, and domestic work" (p. 93).They
argue that the "process of intimate labor is not uniform" (p. 6). Some
forms entail face-to-face contact. Intimate labor often includes emotional involvement,
but not always. What remains consistent, however, is that intimate labor is a primary
source of livelihood for women, and its recognition and compensation in the marketplace
are growing. No longer is it confined within the boundaries of heterosexual matrimony
or parent-child relationships.
According to the editors, the essays "seek to understand what happens when
intimate labor enters the marketplace and becomes paid both in terms of working
conditions and the value of the worker herself" (p. 11). The extent to which
these essays reach this end remains, like intimate labor itself, inconsistent and
variable, dependent upon accessibility and experience.
New Labor Forum 21(1): 102-111, Winter 2012
Copyright © Joseph S. Murphy Institute, CUNY
ISSN: 1095-7960/11 print, DOI: 10.4179/NLF.211.0000019