The National Union of Namibian Workers: Background and Formation

1983 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 151-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henning Melber

[Windhoek, 1977]…fellow-workers…the weak point we have [to remedy] in order to change the system is unity and co-operation. And we must not distinguish whether some workers are sleeping in a compound and some are staying in the single quarters and some in the so-called locations. All of us who are exploited, we blacks, we must know that we are all workers. We workers want to be in unity. We workers in Namibia, we want to unite. It doesn't matter what kind of work he is doing, each and every worker should come into that union. After such unity and co-operation have been established, it is only then that it will be possible to campaign for better working conditions, for higher wages and to embark on any other action which will change the working conditions.

Undelivered ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 38-59
Author(s):  
Philip F. Rubio

This chapter looks at the low pay and poor working conditions in the late 1960s and the upsurge of rank-and-file postal worker reform campaigns against what they called “collective begging” of Congress. Chronic postal deficits and a sudden service breakdown in Chicago in 1966 led to the 1967 Kappel Commission that first explored a postal corporation model. The chapter also charts the growing postal worker anger at Congress; presidents Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard Nixon; and their own national union leaders for ignoring their pleas for living wages. Militant rank-and-file organizing in New York led up to the wildcat strike that began there on March 18, 1970.


2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily M. Lyle ◽  
Gary A. Adams ◽  
Steve M. Jex ◽  
Simon Moon

2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Greiner ◽  
E. Rosskam ◽  
V. McCarthy ◽  
M. Mateski ◽  
L. Zsoldos ◽  
...  

2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leif Sandsjo ◽  
Lena Grundell ◽  
Kirsi Valtonen ◽  
Ann-Katrin Karlsson ◽  
Eira Viikari-Juntura

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
BongKyoo Choi ◽  
Marnie Dobson ◽  
Hyoung Ryoul Kim ◽  
Nicole Champagne ◽  
Horacio Tovalin Ahumada

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