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No Shortcuts

Organizing for Power in the New Gilded Age

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The crisis of the progressive movement is so evident that nothing less than a fundamental rethinking of its basic assumptions is required. Today's progressives now work for professional organizations more comfortable with the inside game in Washington, DC (and capitols throughout the West), where they are outmatched and outspent by corporate interests.

In No Shortcuts, Jane McAlevey argues that progressives can win, but lack the organized power to enact significant change, to outlast their bosses in labor fights, and to hold elected leaders accountable. Drawing upon her experience as a scholar and longtime organizer in the student, environmental, and labor movements, McAlevey examines cases from labor unions and social movements to pinpoint the factors that helped them succeed - or fail - to accomplish their intended goals.

McAlevey makes a compelling case that the great social movements of previous eras gained their power from mass organizing, a strategy today's progressives have mostly abandoned in favor of shallow mobilization or advocacy. She ultimately concludes that, in order to win, progressive movements need strong unions built from bottom-up organizing strategies that place the power for change in the hands of workers and ordinary people at the community level.

©2016 Oxford University Press (P)2019 Tantor
Elections & Political Process Labour & Industrial Relations Political Science Politics & Government Sociology Socialism Capitalism Social justice Liberalism Social Movement Labour Union Labour Movement
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A very good book about recent union history and strategy, required reading if you are a trade unionist

sharp as a knife

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Organisation versus mobilisation. A brilliant and important intervention in the political theory of union organising and community organising. There really are no shortcuts!

A brilliant and important intervention

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This book has some interesting ideas but is also trapped in the American mindset, where labor never really has succeeded at the strategic level. It reads as the typical American story: a bragging about personal involvement in successful labor battles, but with so much virtue signaling and too little operational descriptions to really hit the mark. It’s not a bad book and it is an important perspective, but far from anything truly revolutionary.

Not really useful

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