The study of labor is an interdisciplinary field that deals with work, the workplace, workers and their organizations. It draws from the fields of History, Economics, Industrial Relations, Political Science, Law, Sociology, Communication, and Philosophy, as well as other disciplines. Labor study courses cover these sections of information to fully cover the tactics of strikes formed form workplaces matters. Work place matters can range from poor work conditions, overly worked days, long hours, and low pay wages. Along with unfair behavior targeted against certain groups of people such like women, African Americans’, and Hispanics, are the most battered groups in the work place. In this paper I will discuss a series of well-known strikes like …show more content…
This strike effected 11,000 miners and their families. The miners wanted to strike and that caused a big delinquent issue. The workers was fed up with the work conditions that they set forth to speak their mind through a vicious strike. They was fed up with how other united workers was getting treated by armed forces and they were dying. There were private armed forces and strikebreakers (largely immigrant labor) sent in to destroy the miners work and what they was trying to do to help them survive. Workers was getting evicted from their company-own homes because of this. This strike held out for 14 months which led in 66 deaths and a number of unknown injuries. This had consequences for organizing unity which resulted in this violence. The confrontation turn most violent because the miners felt were losing everything they worked so hard for and simply was not going let the government treat them this way …show more content…
He started a strike against the major American recording companies because of disagreements over royalty payments this strike was very unsuccessful, mostly unforgettable. The strike did not affect musicians performing on live radio shows, in concerts as the strike extended into 1943. The strike had an effect on radio shows that used recorded music due to the limited amount of new recordings. Radio programs that relied mainly on records found it difficult to keep introducing new music to their listeners agreeing to make direct payments to a union-controlled “relief fund” I don’t believe technology was the “enemy” of musicians I think the strike worked in everyone’s