Office Automation Conference 1982: Difference between revisions

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'''<font face = arial light> <font color = maroon> <font size = 3>Unfinished History</font></font> </font>'''
[[Image:labor1$costume-picketline.jpg]]
[[Image:labor1$costume-picketline.jpg]]


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'''March 1980 masthead of the "Downtown Women's NEws, a pro-union publication in SF.'''
'''March 1980 masthead of the "Downtown Women's NEws, a pro-union publication in SF.'''
[[Image:labor1$office-workers$bwu_itm$on-the-rise.jpg]]
'''''On The Rise '' issue for March 31, 1982; a publication of Bankworkers United.'''




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[[category:Labor]] [[category:1980s]]
[[category:Labor]] [[category:1980s]] [[category:Women]]

Latest revision as of 23:49, 5 January 2009

Unfinished History

Labor1$costume-picketline.jpg

Office Automaton Picket line at Office Automation Conference 1982, SF

Attempts to organize office workers by traditional bureaucratic service-worker unions like the SEIU and OPEIU were largely a flop. Indeed these unions, like most others during the early eighties, actually lost a lot of members to decertification elections and runaway shops, which began to afflict the clerical workforce much as they had been battering industrial and transportation workers for several years already. More promising efforts, like the underground independent proto-unions Bankworkers United and IBM Workers United, fizzled out in the heavy rain of repression under Reagan.

Labor1$pw-1-cover.jpg

Front cover of the first issue of Processed World magazine, Spring 1981. Art by Linda Wiens.

Labor1$unions.jpg

March 1980 masthead of the "Downtown Women's NEws, a pro-union publication in SF.

Labor1$office-workers$bwu itm$on-the-rise.jpg

On The Rise issue for March 31, 1982; a publication of Bankworkers United.


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