Effects of automation in the lives of longshoremen This chapter in Stan Weir's Singlejack Solidarity tells the history of how, from the victory in the 1934 General Strike through the first…
For a new workerism: Glaberman, Weir and Lynd Alex Erikson reviews “Punching Out” by Marty Glaberman, “Singlejack Solidarity” by Stan Weir, and “Wobblies and Zapatistas” by Staughton Lynd and Andrej Grubacic.
American labor on the defensive: A 1940’s odyssey - Stan Weir An article by Stan Weir surveying the effects World War II and the post-war years had on CIO unions…
Work in America: encounters on the job - Stan Weir Some work stories from Stan Weir, a socialist who worked a variety of manual labor jobs during the 1950s-1970s.
Voices from the rank and file: remembering Marty Glaberman and Stan Weir Staughton Lynd remembers two socialists who wrote extensively about life on the job and struggles at…
Singlejack solidarity - Stan Weir Collection of writings by Stan Weir, a socialist who worked as a seaman, teamster, longshoreman, house painter, and auto assembler (among other…
Rediscovering Two Labor Intellectuals - Steve Early Steve Early reviews collections of writings by Martin Glaberman and Stain Weir, while tying their experience and outlook to the emerging split within the AFL-CIO in 2004.
Just a matter of gloves - Stan Weir An account of a work stoppage over the issue of gloves being supplied in a factory.
The role of the individual and the group in the creation of work cultures - Stan Weir Stan Weir compares wildcat strikes in Poland and San Diego and their basis in the 'informal work…