This symposium originated in a session at the annual meeting of the American Society for Legal History held in Seattle in October 1998. Entitled Labor, Law, and the State in the Interwar Period, the panel provided four different views of a decisive period in the development of labor law in the United States. In the 1980s the panel\u27s chair, Katherine Van Wezel Stone, and commentator, Christopher L. Tomlins, published works that helped spark a modern revival in the historical study of U.S. labor law. The authors of the four papers presented at the session were more recent entrants into the field and had significantly different perspectives on their subject. As members of the audience quickly realized, the panel as a whole provided an ex...
This essay muses on the relationship between law, labor organizing, politics, and the role of academ...
Since passage of the Wagner Act in 1935, U.S. labor law has guaranteed workers the right to strike. ...
The essays and commentary in this issue mark six decades since an overwhelming majority of Congressi...
This symposium originated in a session at the annual meeting of the American Society for Legal Histo...
This Article reflects on possible conclusions to be drawn from this symposium. The article concludes...
American historians tend to believe that labor activism was moribund in the years between the First ...
In the early New Deal days, workers\u27 placards in the coal fields proudly proclaimed, President R...
During the last fifty years, labor legislation and public opinion have fluctuated widely. People sho...
It is common knowledge that dramatic and almost revolutionary developments have taken place in labor...
The formative years of the American labor movement were marked by intransigent judicial hostility to...
The author reviews some important events in the history of American labor law, with particular atten...
Even the general circulation press, from the New York Times to the Los Angeles Times to Business Wee...
Within the rich, interdisciplinary literature on law and social movements, scholarly attention has o...
It will be helpful in appraising labor relations problems of today to recall that unionism in this c...
Labor law became labor and employment law during the past several decades. The connotation of labor...
This essay muses on the relationship between law, labor organizing, politics, and the role of academ...
Since passage of the Wagner Act in 1935, U.S. labor law has guaranteed workers the right to strike. ...
The essays and commentary in this issue mark six decades since an overwhelming majority of Congressi...
This symposium originated in a session at the annual meeting of the American Society for Legal Histo...
This Article reflects on possible conclusions to be drawn from this symposium. The article concludes...
American historians tend to believe that labor activism was moribund in the years between the First ...
In the early New Deal days, workers\u27 placards in the coal fields proudly proclaimed, President R...
During the last fifty years, labor legislation and public opinion have fluctuated widely. People sho...
It is common knowledge that dramatic and almost revolutionary developments have taken place in labor...
The formative years of the American labor movement were marked by intransigent judicial hostility to...
The author reviews some important events in the history of American labor law, with particular atten...
Even the general circulation press, from the New York Times to the Los Angeles Times to Business Wee...
Within the rich, interdisciplinary literature on law and social movements, scholarly attention has o...
It will be helpful in appraising labor relations problems of today to recall that unionism in this c...
Labor law became labor and employment law during the past several decades. The connotation of labor...
This essay muses on the relationship between law, labor organizing, politics, and the role of academ...
Since passage of the Wagner Act in 1935, U.S. labor law has guaranteed workers the right to strike. ...
The essays and commentary in this issue mark six decades since an overwhelming majority of Congressi...