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Union organizer



 
 
A union organizer is a specific type of trade union
Trade union

A trade union or labor union is an organization run by and for workers who have banded together to achieve common goals in key areas such as wages, hours, and working conditions....
 member (often elected) or an appointed union official. A majority of unions appoint rather than elect their organizers.

In most unions, the organizer's role is to recruit groups of workers under the organizing model. In other unions, the organizer's role is largely that of servicing members and enforcing work rules, similar to the role of a shop steward
Union steward

Union Steward is the title of an official position within the organizational hierarchy of a trade union. Its uniqueness lies in the fact that rank-and-file members of the union hold this position voluntarily while maintaining their role as an employee of the firm....
.






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A union organizer is a specific type of trade union
Trade union

A trade union or labor union is an organization run by and for workers who have banded together to achieve common goals in key areas such as wages, hours, and working conditions....
 member (often elected) or an appointed union official. A majority of unions appoint rather than elect their organizers.

In most unions, the organizer's role is to recruit groups of workers under the organizing model. In other unions, the organizer's role is largely that of servicing members and enforcing work rules, similar to the role of a shop steward
Union steward

Union Steward is the title of an official position within the organizational hierarchy of a trade union. Its uniqueness lies in the fact that rank-and-file members of the union hold this position voluntarily while maintaining their role as an employee of the firm....
. In some unions, organizers may also take on industrial/legal roles such as making representations before the Australian Industrial Relations Commission
Australian Industrial Relations Commission

The Australian Industrial Relations Commission, or AIRC , is a tribunal with powers under the Workplace Relations Act 1996 . It is the central institution of Australian labour law....
s, tribunals, or court
Court

A court is a body, often a government institution, with the authority to adjudication legal disputes and dispense private law, criminal justice, or administrative law justice in accordance with rules of law....
s.

In North America
North America

North America is the northern continent of the Americas, situated in the Earth's northern hemisphere and almost totally in the western hemisphere....
, a union organizer is a union representative who "organizes" or unionizes non-union companies or worksites. Though some organizers may be volunteers from the union rank-and-file, they are more usually paid professionals. Organizers primarily exist to assist non-union workers in forming chapters of locals, usually by leading them in their efforts.

Methodology

Organizers employ various methods to secure recognition by the employer as being a legitimate union, the ultimate goal being a collective bargaining agreement. The methods can be classified as being either top-down organizing or bottom-up organizing.

Top-down organizing focuses on persuading management
Management

Management in business and human organization activity is simply the act of getting people together to accomplish desired goals. Management comprises planning, organizing, staffing, leadership or directing, and Control an organization or effort for the purpose of accomplishing a goal....
 through salesmanship or pressure tactics. The salesmanship may include offering access to resources such as to a well-trained and skilled supply of labor or access to union cartels. Pressure tactics may include picketing
Picketing

Picketing is a form of protest in which people congregate outside a place of work or location where an event is taking place. Often, this is done in an attempt to dissuade others from going in , but it can also be done to draw public attention to a cause....
 with the intention of embarrassing management or disrupting business, as well as assisting the government in investigating employment law and labor law violations. A strict enforcement of these laws might result in fines and might serve to hurt the violator's chances in a competitive bidding
Bidding

Bidding is an offer of setting a price one is willing to pay for something. A price offer is called a bid. The term may be used in context of auctions, stock exchange, card games, or real estate transactions....
 process. Top-down organizing is generally considered easier than bottom-up and is practiced more in the construction
Construction

In the fields of architecture and civil engineering, construction is a process that consists of the building or assembling of infrastructure. Far from being a single activity, large scale construction is a feat of multitasking....
 industry.

Bottom-up organizing focuses on the workers and usually involves a certification process, normally overseen by a labor relations board such as the NLRB
National Labor Relations Board

The National Labor Relations Board is an Independent agencies of the United States government charged with conducting elections for trade union representation and with investigating and remedying unfair labor practices....
 in the U.S. The process entails either a secret ballot election or, in some cases, a card-signing effort (called card check). In either case, should a majority of the employees agree to union representation, the results bind the company to recognize and negotiate with the union. Normally, both sides are given a chance to campaign for or against unionization, though management has a decided advantage due to their greater access to the employees. It is in this electioneering model where the organizer really organizes: arranging meetings, devising strategy, and developing an internal structure known as an organizing committee
Committee

A committee is a type of small deliberative assembly that is usually intended to remain subordinate to another, larger deliberative assembly—which when organized so that action on committee requires a vote by all its entitled members, is called the "Committee of the Whole"....
. It is from the pool of activists recruited to the organizing committee that the union typically later draws its shop stewards. Though some mistake organizing as strictly being a recruitment effort, numerous obstacles emerge which require more than simple enlistment and promotion of the union. During organizing, management has greater means to reward or punish workers, far overshadowing methods available to the union. For this reason, in most countries, laws such as the U.S. National Labor Relations Act
National Labor Relations Act

The National Labor Relations Act is a 1935 United States federal law that protects the rights of most workers in the private sector to organize trade unions, to engage in collective bargaining, and to take part in Strike actions and other forms of concerted activity in support of their demands....
, guarantee the rights of workers to seek union membership and forbid management's use of undue influence such as bribes or threats. Nonetheless, such charges are hard to prove and the labor movement believes the entire process to be slanted against them in enforcement and interpretation of labor laws. Sometimes, organizing involves legal wrangling over issues such as voter eligibility. In such cases, issues are often settled by appeal to the Labor Board who serves, essentially, as a referee during the process. Intrigue during heated campaigns is not uncommon. In various cases, one or both sides have used spying and information-gathering techniques tantamount to industrial espionage
Industrial espionage

Industrial espionage or corporate espionage is espionage conducted for commerce purposes instead of national security purposes.The term is distinct from legal and ethical activities such as examining corporate publications, websites, patent filings, and the like to determine the activities of a corporation ....
.

Personality

Organizers must be determined, charisma
Charisma

The word charisma refers to a rare trait found in certain human personalities usually including extreme charm and a 'magnetic' quality of personality and/or appearance along with innate and powerfully sophisticated personal communicability and persuasiveness....
tic, and persuasive individuals able to sway groups to action under trying circumstances when jobs are on the line. Organizers must be strong enough to stand up to constant confrontation and must be willing to take big risks. Since failure rates of organizing campaigns are high, "burn-out" among organizers is prevalent. Organizers frequently work under the constraints of limited resources (see sections on organizing as cause and controversies).

Cause within a cause

Within the labor movement, organizing is the cause within the cause. In most industrialized nations, there has been a steady decline in union membership and in the influence of organized labor since the 1950s. A response to this decline has been a renewed organizing effort. The heads of unions are well aware of the problem. In the U.S., many labor activists have blamed John Sweeney
John Sweeney (labor leader)

John Sweeney is the president of the AFL-CIO. An AFL-CIO vice president since 1980, he was elected president of the AFL-CIO at the federation's biennial convention in October 1995 and was most recently re-elected in 2005....
, the current President of the AFL-CIO
AFL-CIO

The American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, commonly AFL-CIO, is a national trade union center, the largest federation of Labor unions in the United States in the United States, made up of 56 national and international unions , together representing more than 10 million workers....
, for not doing enough to organize. In fact, this has been cited as the genesis of the split within the American labor movement that led to the formation of the Change to Win Federation
Change to Win Federation

The Change to Win Federation is a coalition of North America labor unions originally formed in 2005 as an alternative to the AFL-CIO. The coalition is associated with strong advocacy of the organizing model....
, a rival umbrella organization
Umbrella organization

An umbrella organization is an association of institutions, who work together formally to coordinate activities or pool resources. In business, political, or other environments, one group, the umbrella organization, provides resources and often an identity to the smaller organizations....
 of North America
North America

North America is the northern continent of the Americas, situated in the Earth's northern hemisphere and almost totally in the western hemisphere....
n unions set up as an alternative to the AFL-CIO in 2005. Many unions see organizing as a way to ensure the future of their organization. Unions who emphasize organizing and are expansionist are said to have the "organizing model." By contrast, other unions are said to have the "servicing model
Service model

The service model generally describes an approach whereby unions aim to satisfy members' demands for resolving grievances and securing benefits through methods other than direct grassroots-oriented pressure on employers....
," spending most of their resources on providing services to the existing membership (i.e., non-expansionist).

Controversies

Within the labor movement, there is some resistance to organizing, though more in deed than in word. Organizing can be seen as a drain on scarce resources with insignificant returns and with results tenuous. Most unions in the U.S. adopt a service model and eschew organizing. In transient
Transient (civil engineering)

In civil engineering, a transient is used to refer to any pressure wave that is short lived . The most common occurrence of this is called water hammer....
 industries such as construction, an increase in the supply of labor from newly organized shops may cause the supply of jobs to dwindle below what an increased membership can absorb.

Most disputes between unions are jurisdiction
Jurisdiction

In law, jurisdiction is the practical authority granted to a formally constituted legal body or to a political leader to deal with and make pronouncements on legal matters and, by implication, to administer justice within a defined area of responsibility....
al (territorial). Union jurisdiction is based on geographic scope, craft
Craft

A craft is a skill, especially involving practical The Arts. It may refer to a trade or particular art.The terms is often used as part of a longer word ....
, industry
Industry

An industry is the manufacturing of a Good or Service within a category. Although industry is a broad term for any kind of economic production, in economics and urban planning industry is a synonym for the secondary sector, which is a type of economic activity involved in the manufacturing of raw materials into goods and products....
, historical claim, and compromise. Unions have overlapping jurisdictions. Critics within the labor movement have blamed the movement itself for the fractious effects of union-on-union competition
Competition

Competition is a rivalry between individuals, groups, nations, or animals, for territory, a niche, or allocation of resources. It arises whenever two or more parties strive for a goal which cannot be shared....
 and perceived issues of raiding. Expansionism and the scramble for members in organizing programs bring to light these border issues.

Opponents of organizing, mainly in management
Management

Management in business and human organization activity is simply the act of getting people together to accomplish desired goals. Management comprises planning, organizing, staffing, leadership or directing, and Control an organization or effort for the purpose of accomplishing a goal....
 and business, argue that unionization divides employees against their employer and results in increased costs. Such accusations are not entirely without foundation: Indeed, a successful organizing campaign usually demonstrably benefits the labor at the expense of management. Critics will often circulate horror stories about plant closures and retaliatory firings to discourage union activity and uptake among the workers. Real or imagined, such horror stories are taken as warnings and have a chilling effect on voting. Though illegal, retaliatory terminations remain a problem for organizers to overcome. Fear is the leading obstacle to organizing.

Counter organizing

In bottom-up organizing, management and labor are pitted against each other and management often schedules retaliatory, aggressive tactics in an effort to break the chapter, called "union-busting." The intention of such union-busting may be to "nip it in the bud" before getting locked into a costly collective bargaining agreement that normally will entail improved wages and benefits for workers. Management may feel that the organizing campaign encourages and capitalizes upon worker disobedience and perceived disloyalty. For this reason, management may hire anti-union consultants or lawyers known as "union-busters" or "union avoidance consultants." With the goal of thwarting organizing, union-busters typically have a two-pronged approach: firstly, management will cut deals with individual workers to betray the union and secondly, to exploit loopholes in labor law in an effort to derail or sandbag the election process. The emergence of union-busting as an industry is a relatively new phenomenon and is described in Martin Levitt's book Confessions of A Union Buster. Prior to the emergence of the union-avoidance industry, practitioners were mainly "goon squads" also used for strike-breaking. In the U.S., the largest and most well-known goon squad for hire was the Pinkerton Detective Agency, still active today, though in a different capacity. William W. Delaney's "My Father Was Killed By Pinkerton Men" is a song about the violence that often surrounded early American labor strife.

Organizing in popular culture

The most famous movie about organizing is the 1979 factually-based film Norma Rae
Norma Rae

Norma Rae is a 1979 in film film which tells the story of a woman from a small town in the Southern United States who becomes involved in the trade union activities at the textile factory where she works....
, the story of a Jewish organizer from New York
New York

The State of New York is a U.S. state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States and is the nation's List of U.S....
 who came to the American South
South

South is one of the cardinal directions and is opposite to the north.By Western world Norm , the bottom side of a map is south; the southern direction has azimuth or bearing of 180?....
 to organize a textile
Textile

A textile is a flexible material consisting of a network of natural or artificial fibres often referred to as thread or yarn. Yarn is produced by Spinning raw wool fibres, linen, cotton, or other material on a spinning wheel to produce long strands known as yarn....
 mill
Cotton mill

A cotton mill is a factory housing spinning and weaving machinery. Cotton was a leading sector in the Industrial Revolution, as cotton spinning was mechanised in mills....
. He recruits Norma Rae, played by Sally Field
Sally Field

Sally Margaret Field is an United States two-time Academy Awards-winning actress. She is also a three-time Emmy Award winner and two-time Golden Globe Award winner who became a household name at the age of 20 as Sister Bertrille in the 1960s sitcom The Flying Nun....
. Norma becomes a key union activist who defies management at great personal risk.

The 1987 production of Matewan
Matewan

Matewan is an United States drama film by John Sayles, illustrating the events of a coal Mining-workers' Strike action and attempt to unionize in 1920 in Matewan, West Virginia, a small town in the hills of West Virginia....
 is another factually-based story of an organizer who visits a small mining town in West Virginia
West Virginia

West Virginia is a U.S. state in the Appalachian, Upland South, and Mid-Atlantic States regions of the United States, bordered by Virginia on the southeast, Kentucky on the southwest, Ohio on the northwest, and Pennsylvania and Maryland on the northeast....
 and who is able to unite rival ethnic groups against a common enemy: the company.

Both of these stories feature outsiders entering rural
Rural

Rural areas are large and isolated areas of a country, often with low populations. Today, 75 percent of the United States' inhabitants live in suburban and urban areas, but cities occupy only 2 percent of the country....
 company towns and stirring workers up against exploitative management. This is a common theme in organizing. The workers are cast as simple commoners being oppressed
Oppression

Oppression is the use of social power to disempower, marginalize, silence or otherwise subordinate one social group or category, often in order to further empower and/or privilege the oppressor....
 by powerful managers cast in the role of villain
Villain

A villain is an "evil" character in a story, whether a history narrative or, especially, a work of fiction. The villain usually is the antagonist, the character who tends to have a negative effect on other characters....
s. The organizer is portrayed as a liberator. There is some truth in these stories since companies did, in fact, historically hire armed thugs to break up organizing drives through unethical and oppressive means. Modern unions work within the existing system, rather than against it, through sophisticated political action programs. Most unions have reinvented themselves as streamlined, professional machines.

10,000 Black Men Named George, released in 2002, is a movie based on the true story of A. Philip Randolph
A. Philip Randolph

Asa Philip Randolph was a prominent twentieth-century African American US civil rights movement and the founder of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, a landmark for labor and particularly for African-American labor organizing....
, the famous black
Black

Black is the color of objects that do not emit or reflection light in any part of the visible spectrum; they absorb all such frequencies of light....
 organizer who organized the railroad company's largely black Pullman Porters.

The film Bread and Roses
Bread and Roses (film)

Bread and Roses is a 2000 in film film directed by Ken Loach, starring Adrien Brody. The plot deals with the struggle of poorly paid janitorial workers in Los Angeles and their fight for better working conditions and the right to Industrial unionism....
 (2001) depicts the Service Employees International Union
Service Employees International Union

Service Employees International Union is a trade union representing over 2 million workers in over 100 occupations in the United States, Canada, and Puerto Rico....
's "Justice for Janitors
Justice for Janitors

BackgroundJustice for Janitors is a social movement organization that fights for the rights of janitor across the US. It was started in 1985 in response to the low wages and minimal health-care coverage that janitors received....
" campaign to organize cleaners. The story is also a love story between an idealistic young organizer and a female Hispanic immigrant among those he is organizing.

Both of these stories incorporate pro-union messages with ethnic determination. In the case of the Pullman Porters, Randolph is remembered as a civil rights
Civil rights

Civil and political rights are a class of rights ensuring things such as the protection of peoples' physical integrity; procedural fairness in law; protection from discrimination based on sexism, religious intolerance, Racism, Homophobia, etc; individual freedom of freedom of belief, freedom of speech, freedom of association, and freedom...
 hero
Hero

A hero , in Greek mythology and folklore, was originally a demigod, the offspring of a mortal and a deity,their Greek hero cult being one of the most distinctive features of Religion in ancient Greece....
. The Justice for Janitors campaign is about immigrants' rights, as many of the organized janitors are from Hispanic
Hispanic

Hispanic is a term that historically denoted relation to the ancient Hispania . During the Modern Era, it took on a more limited meaning relating to the contemporary nation of Spain....
 or Slavic
Slavic peoples

The Slavic Peoples are a linguistic branch of Indo-European peoples, living mainly in eastern Europe. From the early 6th century they spread from their original homeland to inhabit most of eastern Central Europe, Eastern Europe and the Balkans....
 countries. The status of the characters as minorities paints a picture of them as being outside of, or on the margins of, the American Dream
American Dream

The American Dream is the freedom that allows all Citizenship and most residents of the United States to pursue their goals in life through hard work and free choice ....
, thus further casting workers and activists as underdogs. The underdog theme is an inspirational archetype
Archetype

An archetype is an original model of a person, ideal example, or a prototype after which others are copied, patterned, or emulated; a symbol universally recognized by all....
 in myth.

In the 2005 action movie Four Brothers
Four Brothers (film)

Four Brothers is an Action film crime film directed by John Singleton. The movie stars Tyrese Gibson, Andre 3000, Mark Wahlberg, and Garrett Hedlund....
, one of the characters is a former union activist who turns the bad guy's henchmen against him by informally organizing them against their boss based on the common organizing themes of a greater share in the profits and respect on the job.

In the 1997 action movie Grosse Pointe Blank
Grosse Pointe Blank

Grosse Pointe Blank is a 1997 in film United States comedy movie, directed by George Armitage, and starring John Cusack and Minnie Driver....
, Dan Aykroyd
Dan Aykroyd

Daniel Edward "Dan" Aykroyd, Order of Canada is an Academy Awards-nominated and Emmy Award-winning Canadian comedian, actor, screenwriter, musician, winemaker and ufologist....
's villainous character pursues fellow assassin John Cusack
John Cusack

John Paul Cusack is an United States film actor and screenwriter. He won the 1990 Most Promising Actor CFCA Award for Say Anything..., the 1998 Favorite Supporting Actor Blockbuster Entertainment Award for Con Air, and the 2000 Commitment to Chicago Award....
 in order to include him in a ridiculous assassins' union.

These latter two movies use organizing as a plot device, though they involve black market businesses and are far-fetched for this reason. Nonetheless, they demonstrate how, absent a union's presence, the same issues arise in any vocation
Vocation

A vocation as defined in a religious environment is an occupation for which a person is suited, trained or qualified. Often those who follow a religious vocation have a inclination to undertake the work, often called a calling....
. Also, both of the movies take place in the Detroit, Michigan
Michigan

Michigan is a Midwestern United States U.S. state of the United States of America. It was named after Lake Michigan, whose name is a French adaptation of the Anishinaabe language term mishigama, meaning "large water" or "large lake"....
 area, a city which has produced some great organizers.

The 1992 production Hoffa
Hoffa

Hoffa is a 1992 in film biographical film based on the life and mysterious death of Teamsters Labor union leader Jimmy Hoffa. Although it chronicles Hoffa's early years in Michigan to his leadership in New York City and Washington, D.C....
, starring Jack Nicholson as famed labor leader Jimmy Hoffa
Jimmy Hoffa

James Riddle "Jimmy" Hoffa was an United States labor movement leader and convicted criminal . As the president of the Teamsters from the mid-1950s to the mid-1960s, Hoffa wielded considerable influence....
 of the Teamsters
Teamsters

The International Brotherhood of Teamsters is a trade union in the United States and Canada. Formed in 1903 by the merger of several local and regional locals of teamsters, the union now represents a diverse membership of blue-collar worker and white-collar worker workers in both the public sector and private sectors....
, begins the story where Hoffa's career began: organizing truck drivers and warehouse workers in and around Detroit. Jimmy Hoffa went on to become one of the most powerful labor leaders in U.S. history.

The 1978 movie F.I.S.T, tells the same story of Hoffa's beginnings as an organizer and of his rise to power, albeit with more liberties taken. Sylvester Stallone
Sylvester Stallone

Sylvester Gardenzio Stallone , nicknamed Sly Stallone, is an 48th Academy Awards-nominated American actor, film director, film producer and screenwriter....
 plays Hoffa as a man with good intentions, dogged on both sides, by both sides of the law.

Both Hoffa stories feature Hoffa as a tough "man of the people" and chronicle how his organizing swelled the ranks of the Teamsters. Hoffa was notorious for taking an "ends justifies the means" approach to organizing. Hoffa's legacy remains: his son, James P. Hoffa
James P. Hoffa

James Phillip Hoffa is an United States Lawyer and trade union leader and the General President of the Teamsters. Hoffa was first elected in December 1998 and took office on March 19, 1999....
, is the current General President of the Teamsters.

In an episode of the popular American sit-com The Office, the characters hold an organizing meeting which ends with a manager threatening to fire everyone involved. The character played by comedian
Comedian

A comedian or comic is a person who seeks to entertain members of an audience, primarily by making them laughter. This might be through jokes or amusing situations, or acting a fool, as in slapstick, or employing prop comedy....
 Patrice O'Neal tells the boss, "This isn't over."

The Fred Savage
Fred Savage

Fredrick Aaron Savage is an United States actor and television director and film director, and Television producer.He is best known for his role as Kevin_Arnold#Major_characters in the hit television series The Wonder Years....
 sitcom Working had an episode where the main character organizes his fellow workers into a union and tells management it’s because he really cares about the well-being of his coworkers, exhibiting solidarity.

The song "Solidarity Forever
Solidarity Forever

"Solidarity Forever", written by Ralph Chaplin in 1915, is perhaps the most famous trade union anthem after The Internationale. It is sung to the tune of "John Brown's Body" and is inspired by the "Battle Hymn of the Republic"....
" by Ralph Chaplin
Ralph Chaplin

Ralph Hosea Chaplin became a labour movement activist, when at the age of seven, he saw a worker shot dead during the Pullman strike in Chicago, Illinois....
 has become the anthem of large parts of the labor movement such as those in North America.

See also

  • Party organizer
    Party organizer

    A party organizer or local party organizer is a position in some political parties in charge of the establishing a party organization in a certain locality....


  • Battle of the Overpass
  • Collective bargaining
    Collective bargaining

    Collective bargaining is the process whereby workers organize together to meet, converse, and compromise upon the work environment with their employers....
  • Employee Free Choice Act
    Employee Free Choice Act

    The Employee Free Choice Act is proposed legislation in the United States which aims to "amend the National Labor Relations Act to establish an easier system to enable employees to form, join, or assist labor organizations, to provide for mandatory injunctions for unfair labor practices during organizing efforts, and for other purposes." Un...
  • Labor history
    Labor history (discipline)

    Labor history is a broad field of study concerned with the development of the labor movement and the working class. The central concerns of labor historians include the development of trade unions, Strike actions, lockouts and protest movements, industrial relations, and the progress of working class and socialist political parties, as well...
  • Labor rights
    Labor rights

    Labor rights or workers' rights are a group of legal rights and claimed human rights having to do with labor relations between workers and their employers, usually obtained under labor and employment law....
  • Labor spies
    Labor spies

    Labor spies are persons recruited or employed for the purpose of gathering intelligence, committing sabotage, sowing dissent, or engaging in other similar activities, typically within the context of an employer/labor organization relationship....
  • Labor Unions in the United States
    Labor unions in the United States

    Labor unions in the United States are legally recognized as representatives of workers in many industries. The most prominent unions are among public sector employees such as teachers and police....
  • NLRB election procedures
    NLRB election procedures

    The National Labor Relations Board, an agency within the United States government, was created in 1935 as part of the National Labor Relations Act....
  • Newsies
    Newsies

    Newsies is a 1992 in film Walt Disney Pictures live action film musical film starring Christian Bale, David Moscow, and Bill Pullman. Robert Duvall and Ann-Margret also appeared in supporting roles....
  • Right to assemble
  • Strike action
    Strike action

    Strike action, often simply called a strike, is a work stoppage caused by the mass refusal of employees to perform labour . A strike usually takes place in response to employee grievances....


People

  • Luigi Antonini
    Luigi Antonini

    Luigi Antonini was a noted United States Trade union. Antonini was the first VP of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union, and organizer of the Italian-American Labor Council ....
  • Harry Van Arsdale, Jr.
  • Leon E. Bates
  • Cesar Chavez
    César Chávez

    C?sar Estrada Ch?vez was a Mexican American farm worker, labor leader, and civil rights activism who, with Dolores Huerta, co-founded the National Farm Workers Association, which later became the United Farm Workers....
  • Samuel Gompers
    Samuel Gompers

    Samuel Gompers was an United States Trade union leader and a key figure in Labor history of the United States. Gompers founded the American Federation of Labor , and served as the AFL's president from 1886-1894 and from 1895 until his death in 1924....
  • Joe Hill
    Joe Hill

    Joe Hill, born Joel Emmanuel H?gglund, and also known as Joseph Hillstr?m was a Swedish American labor activist, songwriter, and member of the Industrial Workers of the World ....
  • Sidney Hillman
    Sidney Hillman

    Sidney Hillman was an United States labor leader. Head of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America, he was a key figure in the founding of the Congress of Industrial Organizations and in marshaling labor's support for Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the United States Democratic Party....
  • James Hoffa
  • Mary Harris "Mother" Jones
  • Norma Rae
    Norma Rae

    Norma Rae is a 1979 in film film which tells the story of a woman from a small town in the Southern United States who becomes involved in the trade union activities at the textile factory where she works....
  • A. Phillip Randolph
  • Walter P. Reuther
  • R.J. Thomas
  • Leonard Woodcock
    Leonard Woodcock

    Leonard Freel Woodcock was an American labor union leader and diplomat who was the president of the United Automobile Workers from 1970 to 1977....


External links