My bibliography for “The World of Work and Labor Law” is now available for download at LaborNet.org: here. I hope to make it available at Ratio Juris soon as well.
I’m most grateful to the labor law professors who contributed some of their favorite titles to this compilation: Joseph E. Slater, Eric M. Fink, and Marcia McCormick. And thanks as well to those who looked over a draft or two and offered kind words and support: Charles A. Sullivan, Paul Secunda, Daniel Ernst, Richard Bales, and William Forbath.
Update: There’s a wonderful site missing from the links listed at the end of the above bibliography everyone should know about, namely, Labor History Links, by Rosemary Feurer—author of Radical Unionism in the Midwest, 1900-1950 (2006)—developed for the Labor and Working-Class History Association (LAWCHA). As noted at her site, it is “the most comprehensive…[source] of information, documents, and links of U.S. labor history sites on the internet.” Her “Booklist,” while lacking complete bibliographic details on the titles (sans place of publication and publisher), is nonetheless quite thorough and thus very helpful otherwise, being divided up into topical and chronological categories.
Further Update: Nelson Lichtenstein has reminded me that my alma mater hosts the Center for the Study of Work, Labor, and Democracy (Professor Lichtenstein is its director).
Image: Fruits of Labor (1932), Diego Rivera (1886-1957). Harris Brisbane Dick Fund, 1933 (33.26.8) © 2010 Banco de México Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust, Mexico, D.F./Artists Rights Society (ARS)
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