Labor Movement At the Crossroads–Introduction, The
Introduction
Suggested Reading
Labor Law and the NLRB: Friend or Foe to Labor and Non-Union Workers?
Wilma B. Liebman{{Former Member and Chairman, National Labor Relations Board, 1997-2011; visiting distinguished scholar Rutgers University School of Management and Labor Relations 2015-17; adjunct faculty, NYU Law School, spring 2015 and 2016. This article is based on remarks at the
In Response to "From the Picket Line to the Courtroom: A Labor Organizing Privilege to Protect Workers" by Nicole Hallet
Moshe Z. Marvit{{Moshe Z. Marvit is a fellow at The Century Foundation where he focuses on labor and employment law and policy.}} For years now, many in the labor movement have seen the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) as a
Law and the Questions and Answers of Workplace Mobilization
Michael M. Oswalt{{Michael M. Oswalt is an Assistant Professor at Northern Illinois University College of Law.}} Organizing is risky. Some workers join in and get fired, others face intimidation and drop out, while most–sensing the tension between legal rights and
Demand for Compensation and Call for Solidarity
The editors of this journal have come together with the editors of journals across the country to demand compensation for the work we do to publish legal scholarship. Our demand rests on one fundamental principle: Uncompensated labor is wrong. In