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  5. Sizing Up Worker Center Income (2008-2014): A Study of Revenue Size, Stability, and Streams

Sizing Up Worker Center Income (2008-2014): A Study of Revenue Size, Stability, and Streams

File(s)
Griffith24_Sizing_up_worker_center_income.pdf (1.04 MB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/76094
Collections
ILR Articles and Chapters
Faculty Publications - Labor Relations, Law, and History
Author
Gates, Leslie
Griffith, Kati L.
Kim, Jonathan
Mokhiber, Zane
Bazler, Joseph C.
Case, Austin
Abstract

[Excerpt] Since the publication of Janice Fine’s path-breaking book, Worker Centers: Communities at the Edge of the Dream in 2006, scholars and commentators on the left and the right of the political spectrum have grappled with how to characterize these emergent worker organizations on the US labor relations scene. This chapter deepens our understanding of the nature of worker centers by examining the funding trends that underlay the wide range of experimental organizing and advocacy strategies highlighted in other chapters of this volume. Undoubtedly, to emerge and survive, these organizations need money (Bobo and Pabellon 2016). But how financially stable are worker centers? How big are they? Where does the funding come from? How do they compare to labor unions? To address some of these questions, we compiled a large collection of available data to complete the first systematic empirical analysis of worker center funding across multiple years (2008 through 2014).

Date Issued
2018-01-01
Keywords
worker centers
•
revenue
•
income
•
stability
Rights
Required Publisher Statement: © Labor and Employment Relations Association. Reprinted with permission. All rights reserved.
Type
article

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