This article analyzes the labor relations the US government and American oil companies introduced in Libya between the Suez Crisis of 1956 and the rise of Muammar Qaddafi’s regime in 1969. It argues that labor policies played a crucial role in American Cold War efforts to place Libya in the Western bloc and assure access to its oil resources. Like in other contexts, the American government relied on anti-Communist trade unions, in particular the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO), to oppose radical forms of labor organizing. Bini examines the ways in which Libyan oil workers resisted the forms of segregation and discrimination introduced in oil camps and company towns, by demanding the right to r...
This dissertation examines the lack of a noticeable indigenous labor movement in the contemporary Gu...
Examination of the geopolitics of oil in the 1970s provides important insights into the nature and d...
This article analyzes Italy’s energy politics in the context of the 1973 “oil shock,” by focusing on...
This article analyzes the labor relations the US government and American oil companies introduced in...
This paper analyzes the ways in which U.S. oil companies transformed Libya\u2019s economy and societ...
In the second half of the 1950s, Libya became one of the main oil producing countries of the Mediter...
This article analyzes the labor relations American oil companies introduced in oil camps and company...
The article introduces the special journal issue and discusses the role labor had in transforming oi...
One of the most remarkable pieces of history of the postwar international Labour movement concerns t...
The survival of authoritarian regimes has for a long time been associated with the availability of r...
The oil industry offers a unique take on the relations between public powers and private enterprise....
The Iranian oil nationalisation crisis, which ended in the coup that overthrew nationalist prime min...
(in English): This work discusses about the origin and early development of the oil industry in Liby...
American recently declassified records give evidence that Qaddafi did not meet any significant oppos...
This article examines the assignment of John Alexander-Sinclair, a British United Nations (UN) devel...
This dissertation examines the lack of a noticeable indigenous labor movement in the contemporary Gu...
Examination of the geopolitics of oil in the 1970s provides important insights into the nature and d...
This article analyzes Italy’s energy politics in the context of the 1973 “oil shock,” by focusing on...
This article analyzes the labor relations the US government and American oil companies introduced in...
This paper analyzes the ways in which U.S. oil companies transformed Libya\u2019s economy and societ...
In the second half of the 1950s, Libya became one of the main oil producing countries of the Mediter...
This article analyzes the labor relations American oil companies introduced in oil camps and company...
The article introduces the special journal issue and discusses the role labor had in transforming oi...
One of the most remarkable pieces of history of the postwar international Labour movement concerns t...
The survival of authoritarian regimes has for a long time been associated with the availability of r...
The oil industry offers a unique take on the relations between public powers and private enterprise....
The Iranian oil nationalisation crisis, which ended in the coup that overthrew nationalist prime min...
(in English): This work discusses about the origin and early development of the oil industry in Liby...
American recently declassified records give evidence that Qaddafi did not meet any significant oppos...
This article examines the assignment of John Alexander-Sinclair, a British United Nations (UN) devel...
This dissertation examines the lack of a noticeable indigenous labor movement in the contemporary Gu...
Examination of the geopolitics of oil in the 1970s provides important insights into the nature and d...
This article analyzes Italy’s energy politics in the context of the 1973 “oil shock,” by focusing on...