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Sprint and the Shutdown of La Conexion Familiar: A Union-Hating Multinational Finds Nowhere to Run

dc.contributor.authorPattee, Jon
dc.date.accessioned2020-12-09T16:33:36Z
dc.date.available2020-12-09T16:33:36Z
dc.date.issued1995-04-01
dc.description.abstract[Excerpt] Sprint chairman William T. Esrey has a dream: a long-distance phone company whose fiber-optic tentacles snake across the globe to embrace European and Asian partners, snaring a chunk of the projected $30 billion market for such global corporate networks. The workers fired en masse from Sprint's San Francisco-based La Conexion Familiar subsidiary, thwarted in their attempt to unionize, have their own dreams: among them, receiving reparations for the wrongs dealt to them by Sprint, and keeping their families out of homeless shelters. The chasm between these dreams illustrates the bitter truth about the global economy: while the heads of executives spin with plans for ever-larger money-making enterprises, the workers on whose backs these schemes are erected face a harsh reality: increased union-busting, job losses, lower wages, and worsening working conditions.
dc.description.legacydownloadsIssue_23_____Article_2.pdf: 1391 downloads, before Oct. 1, 2020.
dc.identifier.other1229751
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1813/102656
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.relation.ispartofseriesLabor Research Review
dc.subjectSprint
dc.subjectLa Conexion Familiar
dc.subjectunion organizing
dc.subjectanti-union activity
dc.subjectlabor dispute
dc.subjectglobalization
dc.titleSprint and the Shutdown of La Conexion Familiar: A Union-Hating Multinational Finds Nowhere to Run
dc.typearticle
schema.issueNumberVol. 1, Num. 23

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