Organizing in Hard Times: Labor and Neighborhoods in Hartford

· Temple University Press
eBook
200
Pages

About this eBook

In 1990, Hartford, Connecticut, ranked as the eight poorest city in the country by the census; the real estate market was severely depressed; downtown insurance companies were laying off and the retail department stores were closing; public services were strained; and demolition sites abandoned for lack of funds pockmarked the streets. Hartford's problems are typical of those experienced in numerous U.S. cities affected by a lingering recession.

The harsh economic times felt throughout the city's workplaces and neighborhoods precipitated the formation of grassroots alliances between labor and community organizations. Coming together to create new techniques, their work has national implications for the development of alternative strategies for stimulating economic recovery.

Louise B. Simmons, a former Hartford City Councilperson, offers an insider's view of these coalitions, focusing on three activist unionsOCorhe New England Health Care Employees Union, the Hotel and Restaurant Employees, and the United Auto WorkersOCoand three community groupsOCoHartford Areas Rally Together, Organized North Easterners-Clay Hill and North End, and Asylum Hill Organizing Project. Her in-depth analysis illustrates these groups' successes and difficulties in working together toward a new vision of urban politics.
In the series "Labor and Social Change," edited by Paula Rayman and Carmen Sirianni.
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About the author

Louise B. Simmons is Director of the University of Connecticut Urban Semester Program.

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