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Labor's future: can unions restore the dignity of work?


By now most people have heard about the schism that roiled the American labor movement last summer. When the AFL-CIO AFL-CIO: see American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations.
AFL-CIO
 in full American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial Organizations

U.S.
 wrapped up its Chicago convention in July, reelecting John Sweeney John Sweeney is the name of:
  • John Sweeney (labor leader), (1934-), American president of AFL-CIO.
  • John Sweeney (journalist), , BBC journalist.
  • John E. Sweeney, (1955-), American politician.
  • John Roland Sweeney, (1931-2001), Canadian politician and educator.
 as president, several unions that had been threatening to leave the coalition decided the moment had come to do so.

The departing unions included the two largest in the AFL-CIO, the Service Employees and the Teamsters Teamsters

large, powerful union of U. S. truckers. [Am. Hist.: NCE, 2703]

See : Labor
, besides the Food and Commercial Workers, and the clothing, hotel, and restaurant workers. They joined the Carpenters, which had left the AFL-CIO five years ago, to form the Change to Win federation with the Laborers International Union (LIUNA LIUNA Laborers' International Union of North America ) and the United Farm Workers The United Farm Workers of America (UFW) is a labor union that evolved from unions founded in 1962 by César Chávez, Philip Vera Cruz, Dolores Huerta, and Larry Itliong. This union changed from a workers' rights organization that helped workers get unemployment insurance to that of  (UFW UFW United Farm Workers (union)
UFW United Factory Warehouse
). The UFW subsequently withdrew from the AFL-CIO, while LIUNA, still a member of Change to Win, continues for the meantime as a member of the AFL-CIO, pending a final decision on departing. Thus far the AFL-CIO has lost more than 35 percent of its affiliated membership, a disaster of unprecendented scope.

What led to this breakup? The dissident unions' demands make for a long list, but it's the frustration and anxiety behind the demands that really matter. Presidents of the disembarking unions noted with alarm the continued erosion of labor's foothold in the workforce, union membership having dropped to 12.5 percent of the nation's total, and just 8 percent in the private sector, the lowest proportion in fifty years. (The recent elimination of tens of throusands of unionized jobs at Ford is a dramatic illustration of the problem.) The dissident unions placed primary blame for this decline on the failure to devote sufficient resources to organizing, and ultimately on a failure of leadership on the part of John Sweeney. Their dissatisfaction with Sweeney was such that the dissidents considered running a candidate against him, but dropped that idea when they were unable to move their voting strength above the 40-percent range. They jumped ship, instead.

As a former union president--from 1979 to 1999 I headed the Bricklayers and was a member of the AFL-CIO Executive Council--I supported Lane Kirkland's successor, Tom Donahue Tom "Big Daddy" Donahue (May 21, 1928 – April 28, 1975), was a pioneering rock and roll radio disc jockey.

Donahue's career started 1949 on the east coast of the U.S.
, when John Sweeney ran against him ten years ago. But in one sense last year's political challenge to Sweeney was simply the next turn of a wheel that began rolling with the campaign against Kirkland and Donahue. The anti-Sweeney slogans of last summer brought to mind Yogi yo·gi  
n. pl. yo·gis
One who practices yoga.



[Hindi yog
 Berra's famous "deja vu See DjVu.  all over again," so similar were they to the slogans that Sweeney's supporters used against Kirkland and Donahue a decade ago. Now, as then, dissidents claim the labor movement can survive only if the AFL-CIO--under new leadership--immediately and radically restructures both itself and its affiliated unions, and devotes many more resources to organizing.

That rationale is as wrong now as it was then. It didn't work for the last ten years, a decade in which membership of AFL-CIO affiliates went down rather than up, and it won't work for the next ten. It won't work because organizing is not labor's major problem. Whatever the merits of new leadership, restructuring, and the reallocation of resources The provision of logistic resources by the military forces of one nation from those deemed "made available" under the terms incorporated in appropriate NATO documents, to the military forces of another nation or nations as directed by the appropriate military authority. , such measures will not materially change the condition of the labor movement in America. For the situation that faced Lane Kirkland Joseph Lane Kirkland (March 12 1922 – August 14 1999) was a US labor union leader who served as President of the AFL-CIO for over sixteen years. Biography  a decade ago still faces John Sweeney and the labor movement today. The problems are myriad and overlapping:

* A massive shift in our economy from the manufacturing and allied sectors to the service sectors;

* An equally massive geographic shift in population and employment from the northeastern quadrant of the nation to the Sun Belt;

* The unrestricted ability to move capital to exploit the cheapest labor available, whether in this country or abroad;

* Erosion of the National Labor Relations Act The National Labor Relations Act (or Wagner Act) is a 1935 United States federal law that protects the rights of most workers in the private sector to organize labor unions, to engage in collective bargaining, and to take part in strikes and other forms of concerted  of 1935 by the courts and Congress, to the point where a determined employer with deep pockets can make it impossible, within the law, for employees to organize;

* A business community emotionally and financially committed to creating "a union-free environment";

* Dramatic changes in age, gender, and ethnic make-up of the work force;

* A rapidly changing culture in the work force, in union members, and in society generally.

Over the past quarter-century, these powerful forces hit the U.S. labor movement hard and fast. In light of the changes, I am convinced that union membership would have declined regardless of what the AFL-CIO--and, more important, its constituent unions--did during the Kirkland, Donahue, and Sweeney administrations. Alas, it is not merely a question of tactics and leadership, but of the ongoing, fundamental demoralization de·mor·al·ize  
tr.v. de·mor·al·ized, de·mor·al·iz·ing, de·mor·al·iz·es
1. To undermine the confidence or morale of; dishearten: an inconsistent policy that demoralized the staff.
 of the U.S. labor movement.

What has happened to the union movement in this country? The conventional wisdom (summed up by Tom Geoghegan in Which Side Are You On? [New Press]) says that American labor suffers in large part from a failure of dedication and imagination on the part of its leadership. That doesn't square with what I saw when I was involved in the movement. The AFL-CIO under Kirkland and Donahue consistently played a proactive role as model, catalyst, and facilitator--the only roles the AFL-CIO can play--in the struggles of affiliated unions to cope with the new world they faced. Their efforts were varied and substantial, including developing new approaches to collective bargaining collective bargaining, in labor relations, procedure whereby an employer or employers agree to discuss the conditions of work by bargaining with representatives of the employees, usually a labor union. , prodding unions to focus resources more effectively, and so on.

My point is that what separates the new breed of labor leader from the old is not the ability to adopt new methods. The new breed may be more concerned with packaging themselves for the media--adopting a stance, as Arch Puddington notes in his recent biography of Lane Kirkland, of "public relations public relations, activities and policies used to create public interest in a person, idea, product, institution, or business establishment. By its nature, public relations is devoted to serving particular interests by presenting them to the public in the most  uber alles." But while "America needs a raise" is a smart complaint, it isn't a strategy. Public-relations programs cannot in themselves overcome the two colossal impediments to union strength: labor laws that make sustained organizing growth impossible, and the unrestricted ability to move capital to exploit the cheapest labor available anywhere in the world. As a practical political matter, neither of these obstacles will be removed in the near future, and panicked calls for essentially technocratic changes will only distract attention from them. One sure result of the AFL-CIO's political fracture will be to reinforce the belief that labor's problems primarily reflect the inability of labor's leaders to get their act together.

The reality is that labor's problems are much, much larger. Last summer's AFL-CIO convention offered its fair share of drama, and reporters who specialize in labor issues are still nibbling nibbling Nutrition The consumption of multiple–up to 17–'mini-meals' per day, as opposed to the usual 3 meals/day. Cf Bingeing, Gorging.  on the institutional rivalries, personality clashes, and ambitions--both real and imagined--that underlie the public debate. Beneath the political intrigues loom far more important issues, ones that require not journalists to help us make sense of them, but philosophers. Twentieth-century Catholic philosophers and social critics like Jacques Maritain and Romano Guardini Romano Guardini (1885 – 1968) was a Catholic priest, author, and academic.

Born in Verona, Italy in 1885, Guardini moved to Germany at the age of one and lived there all his life.
 come to mind. And Josef Pieper Josef Pieper (May 4, 1904- November 6, 1997) was a German Catholic philosopher, at the forefront of the Neo-Thomistic wave in twentieth century Catholic philosophy. Among his most notable works are The Four Cardinal Virtues, Leisure, the Basis of Culture and , whose 1951 treatise, Leisure: The Basis of Culture (St. Augustine's Press), assessed modernity's spiritual poverty, continues to provide insight into why the effort to create a humane society A humane society is a group that aims to stop animal suffering due to cruelty or other reasons. Examples
Examples of humane societies include: The Humane Society of the United States, Peninsula Humane Society, American Humane which was founded in 1877 as a network of
 remains elusive.

"Leisure" as used by Pieper is not to be confused with "idleness" or the "leisure classes." Rather it is the state evoked by Psalm 45 and its call to "be still, and know that I am God." By "culture" Pieper meant not merely an affection for the arts, but something far more comprehensive--"those gifts and qualities which while belonging to man, lie beyond the immediate sphere of his needs and wants." In this sense, leisure lies at the foundation of all that makes life valuable to us, including religion. Pieper saw that the claims of a world of "total work" perverted per·vert·ed
adj.
1. Deviating from what is considered normal or correct.

2. Of, relating to, or practicing sexual perversion.
 leisure into mere recreation, perhaps with some diverting amusements thrown in, that simply refreshed a worker so that he could return to work. Thus did the economic arrangements of modernity succeed in destroying "the primary source of man's freedom, independence, and immunity within society."

For Pieper, this destructive force lay in a new source of social power that chained the human spirit to "the ever-turning wheel of buying and selling." Buying and selling were not new, of course, but linked to a new "principle of utility." Noting Max Weber's criticism of modern society, where "one does not only work in order to live, but one lives for the sake of one's work," Pieper observed that this view and its associated values were becoming so ingrained that "it is difficult for us to see how in fact it turns the order of things upside-down" [my emphasis]. And indeed, we see this distortion everywhere today: a world in which the order of things has been turned upside-down.

Overstated o·ver·state  
tr.v. o·ver·stat·ed, o·ver·stat·ing, o·ver·states
To state in exaggerated terms. See Synonyms at exaggerate.



o
? I don't think so. We live in an era of free-trade triumphalism tri·umph·al·ism  
n.
The attitude or belief that a particular doctrine, especially a religion or political theory, is superior to all others.



tri·umph
 in which views and values once considered extreme have become routine. Take, for instance, New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times columnist Thomas Friedman's "A Race to the Top" (June 3, 2005), where he castigates Europe's blue-collar workers for failing to rise to the challenge of global competition. European workers face "the end of a world of benefits they have known for fifty years"--and in Friedman's opinion, they have no one to blame but themselves. He lets us in on "the dirty little secret ... that India is taking work from Europe or America not simply because of low wages ... [but] because Indians are ready to work harder." Friedman smugly bemoans the diminished work ethic work ethic
n.
A set of values based on the moral virtues of hard work and diligence.


work ethic
Noun

a belief in the moral value of work
 of decadent Old Europe This article is about the term in contemporary politics. For the archaeological meaning, see Old European culture.

In January 2003 the term Old Europe surfaced after former U.S.
, calling it "a bad time for France and friends to lose their appetite for hard work--just when India, China, and Poland are rediscovering theirs." French voters, he concludes, are indulging the pipe dream of "trying to preserve a thirty-five-hour work week in a world where Indian engineers are ready to work a thirty-five-hour day."

The thirty-five-hour work day: another sign of how, as Pieper put it, "the world of work lays claim to the whole field of human existence," while globalization globalization

Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation
 cheerleaders Notable cheerleaders
  • Paula Abdul, Los Angeles Lakers, Van Nuys High School
  • Christina Aguilera, North Allegheny Intermediate High School[]
  • Kirstie Alley
  • Ann-Margret
  • Toni Basil
  • Kim Basinger
  • Halle Berry
  • Sandra Bullock[0]
 like Friedman stand by and applaud.

As to Friedman's thesis, I see no evidence that the workers of France or of the rest of Old Europe are losing their appetite for hard work. Indeed, they complain that their work is being taken away from them. And not only their work. Thanks to the kind of globalization Friedman praises, they are losing a culture that has taken centuries to create--a deep culture, at the core of which were well-paying jobs with the likelihood of a lifetime to develop career, occupational, and craft capabilities; excellent health care with equally good health insurance; the prospect of living in retirement with dignity; as well as such grace notes as small shops and businesses, small farmers selling produce in local markets, and quiet Sundays to spend with the family. A nostalgic view? Not really. It is simply the view that "globalization" need not be shaped to the interests of only one segment of society.

Yet short of turning back globalization, what can realistically be done to bring about the dream that seems increasingly to elude our grasp? Where can we look for recourse? To Congress? Ostensibly os·ten·si·ble  
adj.
Represented or appearing as such; ostensive: His ostensible purpose was charity, but his real goal was popularity.
, it represents geographical political interests--but business is by far the largest contributor to congressional campaigns. Would anyone maintain that Congress, particularly in light of the last round of tax cuts, represents the economic interests of the nation as a whole? Does the Federal Reserve Board? The President's Council of Economic Advisors? The White House National Economic Council? The U.S. International Trade Commission? The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative? Anyone?

We are told that these bodies represent all of us, yet no one with a significant labor background serves on any of them, and in reality they represent the economic interests of only one set of stakeholders in our society: the business community, and more recently the financial segment of that community. Businessmen and financiers are important stakeholders in our society and vital to the energy of our economy. But are their economic interests more important than those of farmers, professional people, workers, or the 10-plus percent of our society that lives in poverty and isn't represented by anybody?

In The Divine Right divine right, doctrine that sovereigns derive their right to rule by virtue of their birth alone—a right based on the law of God and of nature. Authority is transmitted to a ruler from his ancestors, whom God himself appointed to rule.  of Capital (Berrett-Koehler), Marjorie Kelly writes that pursuing an ideal of sustainable prosperity for all means "embedding democratic principles in our economic structures." The challenge, she argues, is to fashion a fulfillment of the American Revolution American Revolution, 1775–83, struggle by which the Thirteen Colonies on the Atlantic seaboard of North America won independence from Great Britain and became the United States. It is also called the American War of Independence. , "building a world of economic liberty and justice for all ... [to] complete the design in the economic realm that the framers began in the political realm." Kelly focuses on corporations and corporate governance Corporate Governance

The relationship between all the stakeholders in a company. This includes the shareholders, directors, and management of a company, as defined by the corporate charter, bylaws, formal policy, and rule of law.
, which makes sense in light of the fact that many U.S. corporations have more power than most governments. The place to begin is with the nation's macroeconomic mac·ro·ec·o·nom·ics  
n. (used with a sing. verb)
The study of the overall aspects and workings of a national economy, such as income, output, and the interrelationship among diverse economic sectors.
 decision-making structures. And I think we could do worse than to start with the National Accord that Lane Kirkland negotiated with President Jimmy Carter in 1979. Unfortunately the accord never got very far (the Carter administration Noun 1. Carter administration - the executive under President Carter
executive - persons who administer the law
 self-destructed before the plan could be implemented), but its basic premise was sound: all stakeholders in an economy must be brought together to develop economic policy for the nation, and that doing so will require promoting labor-management cooperation at the company and industry level. These efforts must be revived.

Obviously, others are not so convinced. Having experienced the heady thrills and economic payoffs of recent decades, wringing extravagant tax concessions from communities and closing down plants in search of lower-wage workers, business seems to have lost all institutional memory. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 an excellent 2003 study, Agents of Change: Crossing the Post-Industrial Divide by Charles Heckscher, Michael Maccoby, and their European colleagues, large sectors of business have concluded that "we do not need stakeholder systems anymore--that whatever the situation was in the past, the time has come for pure market individualism." This theme resonates in influential publications like the Economist, which has gone out of its way to hack at the German practice of labor-management cooperation in running businesses. The current world trading system The introduction to this article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject matter.
Please help [ improve the introduction] to meet Wikipedia's layout standards. You can discuss the issue on the talk page.
 runs a game with loaded dice dice with one side made heavier than the others, so that the number on the opposite side will come up oftenest.

See also: Load
: a strong World Trade Organization with sanctioning powers but no labor standards and a weak International Labor Organization International Labor Organization (ILO), specialized agency of the United Nations, with headquarters in Geneva. It was created in 1919 by the Versailles Treaty and affiliated with the League of Nations until 1945, when it voted to sever ties with the League.  with good standards but no enforcement powers. In the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , meanwhile, the absence of general economic democracy was, until fairly recently, hidden by a rising standard of living for workers, a reduction in the gap between rich and poor, and the ameliorative effects of welfare programs. In all three areas, however, the dynamic is now reversed.

The implications of failing to create a more humane society are grave, and only arrogant fools would be willing to risk it. Unfortunately, we are caught in the grip of highly competent and very arrogant fools, both in government and in the dominant segment of the business community.

In What's the Matter with Kansas? (Metropolitan Books), Thomas Frank describes the devastation wrought on parts of Kansas by the pure market individualism that has become our prevailing national ethos. "If Kansas is the concentrated essence of normality," Frank writes, "then here is where we can see the deranged de·range  
tr.v. de·ranged, de·rang·ing, de·rang·es
1. To disturb the order or arrangement of.

2. To upset the normal condition or functioning of.

3. To disturb mentally; make insane.
 gradually become normal, where we can look into that handsome, confident, reassuring, all-American face--class president, quarterback, Rhodes scholar Rhodes scholar
n.
A student who holds a scholarship established by the will of Cecil J. Rhodes that permits attendance at Oxford University for a period of two or three years.



Rhodes scholarship n.
, bond trader, builder of industry--and realize we are staring into the eyes of a lunatic." Where Tom Friedman There have been two notable people named Tom Friedman:
  • Tom Friedman is an American sculptor.
  • Thomas L. Friedman is a columnist for the New York Times.
 sees a celebration, Thomas Frank sees an asylum. And the lunatics--for the meantime, anyway--are firmly in control.

The situation is not hopeless. These impediments can be overcome, but not tomorrow or even the day after tomorrow, and then only through changes in our political and economic culture. The challenge to labor, then, is twofold: to develop a long-term strategy to bring about that cultural change, not only in society, but in the labor movement also; and to find ways to involve rank-and-file members in the process of developing that strategy.

Those outside the labor movement should pray that labor succeeds in the continuing effort to create a more humane society, since the stark reality is that nobody else can do it. In his 1958 book, Reflections on America (Gordian Press), Jacques Maritain balanced his misgivings about capitalism with a belief that the U.S. labor movement would ultimately play the leading role in humanizing the system he so profoundly mistrusted. Noting the power of what he called "big money," Maritain warned that the full development of his vision of "economic humanism" wasn't right around the corner. It would take a long time, he predicted--at least a century.

Given the trends of the 1970s and 1980s, when "big money" abrogated the social contract forged in the National Labor Relations Act of 1935, we may now need to add a few years to Maritain's estimate. As a society, we have taken some giant steps backward. In The Right Nation: Conservative Power in America (Penguin), two reporters for the Economist, John Micklethwait John Micklethwait, born in 1962, has been editor-in-chief of The Economist magazine since March 23, 2006. Previously he was United States editor of the publication and ran the New York Bureau for two years, having edited the Business Section of the newspaper for the  and Adrian Woodbridge, provide an excellent review of four decades of conservative ascendancy. With the sympathy you would expect from Economist reporters, The Right Nation shows us how the shattered party of Barry Gold-water became the effective political movement that forty years later elected and reelected George W. Bush, and more important, continues to shape cultural dialogue. The success of conservatives in hijacking hijacking

Crime of seizing possession or control of a vehicle from another by force or threat of force. Although by the late 20th century hijacking most frequently involved the seizure of an airplane and its forcible diversion to destinations chosen by the air pirates, when
 public political discourse proves that ideas count, and that politicians will follow them--ideas, at any rate, that come packaged with large amounts of money. In this context of well-funded strategic solidarity on the right, the recent union disaffiliations look particularly tragic. The defection of up to 5 million members from America's trade-union center will be devastating dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
 over time, and we may need to add yet more decades to Maritain's century.

The ship of labor, though, is not so much in danger of sinking as it is of merely continuing to drift, with no clear idea of where it needs to go and how to get there. To be sure, the U.S. labor movement needs to organize more workers, but how and to what end? One critical proximate proximate /prox·i·mate/ (prok´si-mit) immediate or nearest.

prox·i·mate
adj.
Closely related in space, time, or order; very near; proximal.



proximate

immediate; nearest.
 end would be to reverse the loss of real earnings and benefit programs most U.S. workers have been suffering for the last decade. Another would be to bring to a much larger segment of society the considerable benefits of unionism: according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)

A research agency of the U.S. Department of Labor; it compiles statistics on hours of work, average hourly earnings, employment and unemployment, consumer prices and many other variables.
, union workers' median weekly earnings in 2004 were 27 percent higher than their nonunion nonunion /non·union/ (non-un´yun) failure of the ends of a fractured bone to unite.

non·un·ion
n.
The failure of a fractured bone to heal normally.
 counterparts, and more than five times as many had defined-benefit pensions. But such laudable objectives will not stem the decline in labor's effectiveness, let alone reverse it. Those who give organizing top priority would do well to reflect on a bit of Thomistic wisdom: That which is first in the order of intention, is last in the order of execution. Organizing requires much more than simply allocating more resources.

The problem with most of the proposals advanced by the dissident unions this past summer is not that they are silly; rather, a case can be made for almost all of them. Still, they are the kind of things you see when you look through the wrong end of a telescope. The big picture is missing. The right end of the telescope focuses first on the members as people who work, then looks to create the kind of society that permits them to live a full human life, both on and off the job.

In his fascinating 1940 autobiography, the English stone-carver Eric Gill Arthur Eric Rowton Gill (February 22, 1882 – November 17, 1940) was a British sculptor, typeface designer, stonecutter and printmaker, who was associated with the Arts and Crafts movement.  (he fiercely rejected being called a "sculptor" or "artist") suggested where those of us prompted by a progressive vision of society ought to start our thinking. "My socialism," Gill wrote, "was from the beginning a revolt against the intellectual degradation of the factory hands and the damned ugliness of all that capitalist industrialism in·dus·tri·al·ism  
n.
An economic and social system based on the development of large-scale industries and marked by the production of large quantities of inexpensive manufactured goods and the concentration of employment in urban factories.
 produced .... It was not so much the working class that concerned me as the working man--not so much what he got from working as what he did by working."

Gill's point is not that income is unimportant, but that in addition to questions of distribution and decent working conditions, a truly human life is one that enables people to find satisfaction and pleasure in their work. Yes, unions must give day-to-day priority to wages and conditions. But Gill's insight illuminates three more things they need to be doing: addressing more intensively the professional, occupational, and craft needs of their members; striving to gain for their members an effective voice in designing both the work and the product of their work; and building internal structures to assure that members have an effective voice within their own organizations.

* Meeting the professional/craft needs of members. It's fairly easy for unions to determine, and fulfill, their members' need for professional and skill training. In the bricklayer's union, we used polling to gauge which programs were most important to members, and discovered that training programs outranked both medical and pension plans. In construction, where employment for the most part is by the job or project, skill determines both the quality of jobs open to a worker and the security of employment, and training programs help workers to increase both the depth and breadth of their skills. But the issues cut deeper than economics alone to the question of the pride people take in the quality of their work. To foster these feelings, and to enhance the perception that union workers were more skilled and more productive than nonunion workers (a perception shared, incidentally, by nonunion workers at that time), we established a "Craft Is Back" program, honoring our members' skills and devoting more union and industry resources to training.

That such programs would resonate with construction craft workers is obvious, but the approach has traction in other occupations as well. I recall a conversation a few years back with the head of a European construction union; we were comparing notes on such matters as member attendance at union meetings when he noted that his son, who was a baker, had felt "afflicted af·flict  
tr.v. af·flict·ed, af·flict·ing, af·flicts
To inflict grievous physical or mental suffering on.



[Middle English afflighten, from afflight,
" and bored with union meetings--until his union started sponsoring classes in, and discussions on, baking techniques.

* Providing an effective voice for members in designing both their work and the product of their work. This objective is not as mystical as it may sound. In fact, up until the mid-1980s, it appeared as though we might be at the dawn of a new era in labor-management relations in the United States. Back then, gifted union leaders, working together with far-sighted far·sight·ed or far-sight·ed  
adj.
1. Able to see distant objects better than objects at close range; hyperopic.

2. Capable of seeing to a great distance.

3.
 industrialists and corporate officers, and buttressed by the field work of tough-minded academics, were exploring ways to increase worker participation in job decision making. The talk was all about how to expand the scope of matters jointly addressed by labor and management in order to establish a continuing working relationship. This would replace the intense antipathies generated by the bargaining clash at the end of a labor agreement--typically the only sustained interaction between union and employer. The idea was that a continuing relationship between contract negotiations would give each side a better understanding of the problems faced by the other. Collective bargaining would place more emphasis on an ongoing flexible process, with labor and management cooperating as independent stakeholders in the strategic direction of the company.

The idea was by no means new; indeed, it has deep roots in Catholic social thought. I recall a conversation with Michael Harrington

For other people named Michael Harrington, see Michael Harrington (disambiguation).
Edward Michael Harrington
 in which he traced the vision back to Wilhelm von Ketteler, bishop of Mainz, in the 1840s. In George G. Higgins Msgr. George G. Higgins is a renowned labor activist. He is known as the "labor priest," and has been a moving force in the Roman Catholic church's support for the late Cesar Chavez and his union movement.

Higgins is a native of Chicago, Illinois.
 and the Quest for Verb 1. quest for - go in search of or hunt for; "pursue a hobby"
quest after, go after, pursue

look for, search, seek - try to locate or discover, or try to establish the existence of; "The police are searching for clues"; "They are searching for the
 Worker Justice (Rowman & Littlefield), John J. O'Brien concisely traces the exciting evolution of the idea in Catholic social thought from the mid-nineteenth century, with its impact on Rerum novarum Rerum Novarum (Translation: Of New Things) is an encyclical issued by Pope Leo XIII on May 15 1891. Overview
Rerum Novarum was an open letter, passed to all Catholic bishops, that addressed the condition of the working classes.
, through the twentieth-century work in the United States of the men and women associated with the Social Action Department of the National Catholic Welfare Council. As for the AFL-CIO, its concern over the years has been to ensure that "participation" would enhance cooperation with workers, not to co-opt them but to promote genuine worker participation programs that expand rather than replace collective bargaining.

A quarter-century ago it appeared that this might happen. Instead developed the seemingly sudden emergence of a global labor market labor market A place where labor is exchanged for wages; an LM is defined by geography, education and technical expertise, occupation, licensure or certification requirements, and job experience , with lightning-fast capital flashing to wherever labor was cheapest, and a decade-plus of Reaganism and Thatcherism, bookended by Democratic compliance (Carter's obsession with deregulation Deregulation

The reduction or elimination of government power in a particular industry, usually enacted to create more competition within the industry.

Notes:
Traditional areas that have been deregulated are the telephone and airline industries.
, Clinton's with free trade). Corporate profits soared, the rich got very much richer, and the rest is history--a history we need to reverse.

* Drawing members into union decision making. What is widely regarded as apathy among working people concerning what we think of as "worker issues" is not really apathy. It is more akin to futility, the feeling that nobody in power--in government, in the workplace, or in the unions--really cares what they think, and that they have no real voice in those things most important to them. For unions, this is an institutional tragedy, because they exist precisely to give workers a means to shape their fates. The genius of the Gompers generation in setting the course of the U.S. labor movement lay in its deep-gut understanding of a key paradox: The whole point of collective action through unions is to empower individuals.

Today, workers most in need of empowerment are union members who are Republicans. Many are strong trade unionists who nonetheless feel that their overall values are better reflected in the GOP. An effective way to accommodate their hopes and harness their energies would be to form Republican and Democratic subcommittees of labor's political action committees and utilize the contributions from members for candidates of their respective parties who favor labor issues. The Republican subcommittee could work to give members a voice within the GOP. That voice would never have the strength of business interests, but given sufficient resources it would become one that could not be totally ignored. It would also provide space for Republican officials who support labor on many issues and all too frequently find their thanks in the form of opposition from a Democrat backed by labor.

The logic for accommodating our Republican members is compelling, even to someone like me, a lifelong Democrat and a former member of the Democratic National Committee. It is a fact that at least 30 percent of union members are Republicans, and a substantially larger number will vote Republican in given elections, depending on the issues. Union members have many roles other than "workers." Their other life experiences will shape their political views, and those views must be respected if unions wish to keep their loyalty. Furthermore, as Leon Fink's work on the Knights of Labor Knights of Labor, American labor organization, started by Philadelphia tailors in 1869, led by Uriah S. Stephens. It became a body of national scope and importance in 1878 and grew more rapidly after 1881, when its earlier secrecy was abandoned.  and American politics (Workingman's Democracy, University of Illinois Press The University of Illinois Press (UIP), is a major American university press and part of the University of Illinois. Overview
According to the UIP's website:
) amply demonstrates, the interests of a political party and of the labor movement are never the same for very long, so a union can never afford to become an adjunct of a political party. The views of "political purists" notwithstanding, labor needs to work with whatever party is dominant. Former U.S. Labor Secretary John Dunlop John Dunlop could refer to:
  • John Boyd Dunlop (1840–1921), inventor of the pneumatic tyre
  • John Dunlop (Northern Ireland politician) (1910–1996), former MP for Mid Ulster
  • John Thomas Dunlop (1914–2003), former US Secretary of Labor
  • John L.
 once admonished that a democracy requires people to learn how to work with others on points of agreement even as they disagree. Much to the consternation of radical leftists, that's how we deal with employers. It must also be how we deal with government.

Empowering members within their unions is a key element of the big-picture view I referred to earlier. As Larry Cohen cohen
 or kohen

(Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male.
, now president of the Communications Workers of America Communications Workers of America (CWA) is the largest communications and media labor union in the United States (the union also has locals in Canada), representing over 700,000 workers in both the private and public sectors. , observed online in a paper titled "American Labor--Working Together": "Union democracy is not a slogan; it must be a reality in everything we do." This means developing structures that virtually require, as distinct from merely permitting, the participation of ordinary members. It means providing forums where members can informally test their ideas, and establishing educational programs where members can develop informed views on policy issues. At the Bricklayers, a pilot program convinced me that study circles--conducted by trained rank-and-file discussion leaders--constitute perhaps the single most powerful means of developing a shared vision and sense of direction within an organization. Study circles coupled with distance-learning programs would provide the answer to how to create effective and broad-based worker education. Such efforts as distance-learning programs may well require the economies of scale that only the AFL-CIO can provide, perhaps with modules that affiliated unions would use to tailor the program to specific economic sectors.

Ultimately, building a new union culture cannot succeed without corresponding long-term efforts to change the culture of the broader society. In a recent article in Dissent (Winter 2005) titled "Democratizing the Demand for Worker Rights," Georgetown professor Joseph A. McCartin makes a persuasive argument that unions need to place primary emphasis on their role in bringing democracy to the workplace. Underscoring the link between the distribution of power in the workplace and in the larger society, McCartin quotes early twentieth-century labor reformer Frank P. Walsh's insight that "political democracy is an illusion unless [it is built] upon and guaranteed by a free and virile virile /vir·ile/ (vir´il)
1. masculine.

2. specifically, having male copulative power.


vir·ile
adj.
1.
 industrial democracy." "We need to advance ... arguments that speak directly not only to workers' aspirations for freedom," writes McCartin in a later response to comments on his article, "but also to their desire for a say over the economic institutions that affect their lives."

Demanding political and economic democracy for everyone means moving beyond traditional forms of labor protest. Attacks on corporate excesses and demands for an equitable share in the profits of business can energize en·er·gize  
v. en·er·gized, en·er·giz·ing, en·er·giz·es

v.tr.
1. To give energy to; activate or invigorate: "His childhood
 workers to strike, but they are not sufficient for the transformation of society necessary to sustain an effective labor movement. That requires articulating a vision of what scholar Peter Faulkner <noinclude>

Peter Ian Faulkner (born 18 April 1960 in Launceston, Tasmania) was an Australian first-class cricketer who played for the Tasmanian Tigers. An allrounder, he took over 100 wickets and made over 2000 runs for his state.
 called, in reference to Eric Gill, a "more humanly satisfying social system." Which brings us back to Jacques Maritain's vision of "economic humanism."

Neither Gill nor Maritain tried to spell out a plan to achieve economic humanism. And given the powerful claims made by the upside-down world of total work, there's no doubt that restoring sanity and turning the order of things right-side up right-side up
adv. & adj.
1.
a. With the top facing upward: Keep this box right-side up.

b.
 again will take a colossal effort. Any labor leader who thinks there is a quick fix in political action, organizing, or public relations--without addressing the deeper cultural problem--is deluding himself and the membership. Under even the best of circumstances, labor is in for a long, hard struggle. The way to begin transforming demoralization into a renewal of spirit is not to push blame upward to the AFL-CIO, but to lay out the hard facts to the membership and to begin the necessary process of involving them in the reform that will make it possible for labor to move forward.

It will come not in great leaps but in tiny steps. As Thomas Frank notes, it took roughly forty years, from 1890 to 1930, for a progressive movement to bring about the reforms of the New Deal. And of course labor's battles span not forty years, but much, much longer--over two centuries--just to gain legal status in the United States, and, going back further, ten centuries since the weavers of the Middle Ages began to challenge the divine rights claimed by their employers.

Patience will be required, then, and perseverance. Instead of thinking in terms of this year or next, we should aim to bring about significant social change over a forty-year period--just as the Right did in this country over a similar span. To follow the lessons suggested by The Right Nation, a first objective might be to create a consortium of prolabor think tanks stimulated, if not with fresh funding, with a large portion of the money labor would otherwise spend on political campaigns over the next few political cycles. The first step would be not to eviscerate e·vis·cer·ate  
v. e·vis·cer·at·ed, e·vis·cer·at·ing, e·vis·cer·ates

v.tr.
1. To remove the entrails of; disembowel.

2.
 the AFL-CIO, but to convene a summit of business interests sympathetic to labor, of liberal "big money," and of those religious organizations and leaders who have as much interest in bringing about a more humane society as in barring abortion and homosexual marriage. The overarching theme must not be to demonize de·mon·ize  
tr.v. de·mon·ized, de·mon·iz·ing, de·mon·iz·es
1. To turn into or as if into a demon.

2. To possess by or as if by a demon.

3.
 business, bring down capitalism, or end globalization--but to bring about economic democracy.

Concurrent with building an effective coalition of those that the late George Higgins described as "on the side of the angels," the labor movement must attend to its fundamental internal challenges. This means bringing some harsh messages to the membership--including scrutinizing labor's complicity in its own demoralization and marginalization mar·gin·al·ize  
tr.v. mar·gin·al·ized, mar·gin·al·iz·ing, mar·gin·al·iz·es
To relegate or confine to a lower or outer limit or edge, as of social standing.
. As the German theologian Romano Guardini wrote in Power and Responsibility, "Domination requires not only the passive consent, but also the will to be dominated, a will eager to drop personal responsibility and personal effort." Broadly speaking Adv. 1. broadly speaking - without regard to specific details or exceptions; "he interprets the law broadly"
broadly, generally, loosely
, he continued, "the dominated get what they themselves desire; the inner barriers of self-respect and self-defense must fall before power can really violate."

This is a provocative observation from one who, writing shortly after World War II, had endured twelve years under the most brutally repressive regime in history. And, in my view, it applies to where we are now also. We are all complicit com·plic·it  
adj.
Associated with or participating in a questionable act or a crime; having complicity: newspapers complicit with the propaganda arm of a dictatorship.
 in the mindset mind·set or mind-set
n.
1. A fixed mental attitude or disposition that predetermines a person's responses to and interpretations of situations.

2. An inclination or a habit.
 that holds that the competition between workers on the basis of labor costs is a natural phenomenon as inevitable as the sun rising in the east. Guardini warns of the situation "when human affairs are so deranged or falsely arranged that those responsible can no longer be named. When this happens ... the exercise of power has apparently become a natural force." To break out of complicity in this sort of fatalism fa·tal·ism  
n.
1. The doctrine that all events are predetermined by fate and are therefore unalterable.

2. Acceptance of the belief that all events are predetermined and inevitable.
, we must first recognize with Guardini that "history does not run on its own; it is run." In this sense, history begins anew with each person, and we have both the God-given power to extricate ourselves from our predicaments and the God-given obligation to work to complete the task of his creation. This means not passively capitulating to the notion that nature will take its course, but rather recognizing that what Jacques Maritain called the "ferment ferment /fer·ment/ (fer-ment´) to undergo fermentation; used for the decomposition of carbohydrates.

fer·ment
n.
1.
 of justice and the energies of renewal" will proceed only from vigorous and persevering struggle--and sacrifice.

And that in turn depends on transformation. "What the sick world needs," concluded Guardini, "is a metanoia Metanoia (from the Greek μετανοῖα, metanoia, changing one's mind, repentance) is a rhetorical device used to retract a statement just made, and then state it in a better way.[1] It is similar to correctio. , a conversion, a reappraisal of our whole attitude toward life, accompanied by a fundamental change in the 'climate' in which people and things are appraised." Reaching this reappraisal means radically transforming our culture to reject the dehumanization de·hu·man·ize  
tr.v. de·hu·man·ized, de·hu·man·iz·ing, de·hu·man·iz·es
1. To deprive of human qualities such as individuality, compassion, or civility:
 of man implicit in Adj. 1. implicit in - in the nature of something though not readily apparent; "shortcomings inherent in our approach"; "an underlying meaning"
underlying, inherent
 the ideology of the "total world of work" that Josef Pieper decried.

Such a transformation will remain impossible if the labor movement does not harness its capabilities, point them in the right direction, and keep them trained on the goal over a long period. This will involve recognizing the uncomfortable fact that the transformation we seek is not political at root, but spiritual. To be sure, such a recognition takes us beyond the realm of what workers had on their minds when they created unions. But unions have a vital role to play in the larger scheme of things, and I hope that this role will emerge as labor addresses what clearly is within its realm--helping to create an economic and political environment hospitable to the human spirit.</p> <pre> Thinning after Philip Larkin Philip Arthur Larkin, CH, CBE, FRSL, (9 August 1922 – 2 December 1985) was an English poet, novelist and jazz critic. He spent his working life as a university librarian and was offered the Poet Laureateship following the death of John Betjeman, but declined the post.  My cold frame's chock-full of carrots, so I lift the lid, slowly, each pane Squinting squint  
v. squint·ed, squint·ing, squints

v.intr.
1. To look with the eyes partly closed, as in bright sunlight.

2.
a. To look or glance sideways.

b.
 through a half-moon of rain at early Monday, at ground ivy ground ivy, trailing perennial herb of the genus Glechoma of the family Labiatae (mint family), closely related to catnip and naturalized from Europe. It forms a dense ground cover and spreads rapidly, thriving in cool, damp places.  That needs pulling, at grackles & cardinals trading Roosts in maple & beech Quick as checkers, the morning betting on itself. I dump the water, part Tattered leaves to color pricking through black Mulch, growth so thick And quick my fat fingers can't delegate who's For stew & who's compost, Nor do I have time for the measured claptrap On the back of the packet: For success, carefully thin shoots four to six inches-- Hurrying's fine when luck's The arbiter of everything, so I fumble half-heartedly Down concentrated rows Like the proctor who measured his next cigarette While we divined our future In the gym with an orange HB & mimeographed test Which at thirteen shepherds us To the Arts or Sciences: An only life can take so long To climb clear of its wrong beginnings, And may never--Still, the carrots have next year. I hold them by the scruff, Pencil-thin & bright, & breathe the mud smell, Always rich, always full of hope. --Martin Walls </pre> <p>RELATED ARTICLE: RESIDENCE HALL RECTOR

UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME Notre Dame IPA: [nɔtʁ dam] is French for Our Lady, referring to the Virgin Mary. In the United States of America, Notre Dame  

Make a difference in countless lives. Become a Residence Hall Rector at the University of Notre Dame and participate in a rich tradition of ministry at the heart of student life.

Founded by the Congregation of Holy Cross The Congregation of Holy Cross or Congregatio a Sancta Cruce (C.S.C.) is a Roman Catholic congregation of priests and brothers founded in 1837 by Blessed Father Basil Anthony-Marie Moreau, CSC, in Le Mans, France. , Notre Dame is one of the premier Catholic universities in the United States. Approximately 80% of the University's 8,000 undergraduates choose to live on campus in 27 single-sex halls. The University prizes residential life for the unique opportunities it offers students to develop the commitment to service and sense of responsibility essential for leadership beyond college. Under the direction of the Residence Hall Rector, each hall is a community of faith and learning, where students are encouraged to integrate the intellectual, spiritual, and social dimensions of their education.

Notre Dame's Office of Student Affairs is now accepting applications for the position of Residence Hall Rector for the 2006-07 academic year. This is a full-time, nine-month position. Living alongside students in the residence hall and accompanying them on their journey of faith, the Rector counsels and advises, provides critical support, and when necessary, calls them to accountability. The Rector oversees a staff which includes graduate student Assistant Rectors and senior students who serve as Resident Assistants. Collaboration with a wide array of University departments responsible for student welfare and University facilities is an essential feature of the Rector position.

The successful candidate will possess a Master's degree and a minimum of three years experience in a related field, such as pastoral ministry, education, student personnel or counseling. The possibility exists of additional part-time teaching or administrative responsibilities at the University, if desired. Starting salary in 2005-06 was $30,000 plus benefits; rectors also receive furnished living quarters designed for one person and a partial meal plan.

For further information and application materials, visit our Web site at http://osa.nd.edu.

John T. Joyce is president of the International Construction Institute, a Rome-based international trade-union NGO NGO
abbr.
nongovernmental organization

Noun 1. NGO - an organization that is not part of the local or state or federal government
nongovernmental organization
 formed to help construction unions in developing countries, primarily on housing and training programs. He is a bricklayer by trade, a former president of the International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Craft-workers, and a former vice president of the AFL-CIO.
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Title Annotation:AFL-CIO
Author:Joyce, John T.
Publication:Commonweal
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 10, 2006
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