What Workers Say
Decades of Struggle and How to Make Real Opportunity Now
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Narrado por:
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Lee Ann Howlett
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De:
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Roberta Iversen
Sobre este áudio
What have jobs really been like for the past 40 years and what do the workers themselves say about them? In What Workers Say, Roberta Iversen shows that for employees in labor market industries—like manufacturing, construction, printing—as well as those in service-producing jobs, like clerical work, healthcare, food service, retail, and automotive—jobs are often discriminatory, are sometimes dangerous and exploitive, and seldom utilize people’s full range of capabilities. Most importantly, they fail to provide any real opportunity for advancement.
What Workers Say takes its cue from Studs Terkel’s Working, as Iversen interviewed more than 1,200 workers to present stories about their labor market jobs since 1980. She puts a human face on the experiences of a broad range of workers indicating what their jobs were and are truly like. Iversen reveals how transformations in the political economy of waged work have shrunk or eliminated opportunity for workers, families, communities, and productivity. What Workers Say also offers an innovative proposal for compensated civil labor that could enable workers, their communities, labor market organizations, and the national infrastructure to actually flourish.
The book is published by Temple University Press. The audiobook is published by University Press Audiobooks.
"A timely and well-researched study." (Kirkus Reviews)
“Brings new insights and commentary about paid work through an exhaustive review and reanalysis...” (Julia R. Henly, University of Chicago)
©2022 Temple University—Of The Commonwealth System of Higher Education (P)2022 Redwood Audiobooks