History of Labor Unions
Current Events & Pop Culture
Available to teachers only as part of the Teaching History of Labor Unions Teacher Pass
Teaching History of Labor Unions Teacher Pass includes:
- Assignments & Activities
- Reading Quizzes
- Current Events & Pop Culture articles
- Discussion & Essay Questions
- Challenges & Opportunities
- Related Readings in Literature & History
Sample of Current Events & Pop Culture
Labor Movements Pre-1970 Were More Militant
An article published in the New York Times in April 2009 considers the relative non-militancy of the American labor movement since 1970 in comparison to more militant movements earlier in American history and in European countries today.
Excerpt: “Two weeks earlier, more than a million workers in France demonstrated against layoffs and the government’s handling of the economic crisis, and in the last month alone, French workers took their bosses hostage four times in various labor disputes. When General Motors recently announced huge job cuts worldwide, 15,000 workers demonstrated at the company’s German headquarters. But in the United States, where G.M. plans its biggest layoffs, union members have seemed passive in comparison. They may yell at the television news, but that’s about all. Unlike their European counterparts, American workers have largely stayed off the streets, even as unemployment soars and companies cut wages and benefits.”