Resilient worker coalitions are often found at the intersection of labor and race. On today’s show, from the NC Labor History Revealed podcast, we’ll hear about how North Carolinians formed multi-racial coalitions to fight racism inside and outside the workplace, and how farmworkers leveraged such coalitions to overcome racist inadequacies in federal labor law to secure the largest union contract in North Carolina history.
On this week’s Labor History in Two: The Fight for Equality and Honest Abe’s Stand for Labor.
Questions, comments, or suggestions are welcome, and to find out how you can be a part of Labor History Today, email us at LaborHistoryToday@gmail.com
Labor History Today is produced by Union City Radio and the Kalmanovitz Initiative for Labor and the Working Poor.
Music: Tobacco Blues - Bluesland with The Cold Sweat Horns
The People, No
Stand! The new hit labor musical
The Vancouver Island Coal Strike; Skyscraper Labor
Cutting along the Color Line
Cordwainers strike of 1805
The AFL-CIO turns 65
Paul Robeson and the 1948 Library of Congress cafeteria workers’ strike
America’s last general strike
Monopoly and Class Struggle: The games we play
Uprising of the 20,000
A journey down the Working River
Blue Wave? Labor and the Democratic Coalition in the Southwest
Organizing through the Divide
O Canada, organize!
One Day More
The Package King
Roediger on "The Sinking Middle Class"; Feurer on Mother Jones' legacy
“Despotism on Demand”
Escape on the Pearl; Black Labor Week
Labor Day: no picnic in a pandemic
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