
Are labor unions a subject for political theory? How might we combine reflections on interests, class formation, critiques of capitalism, and ideas of freedom? Could such a theory be useful for agents of change, including rank-and-file workers and organizers? This conference brings together scholars and organizers to think about the past, present, and future of the labor movement. Although unions are at a nadir of power, signs of the possibility of renewal abound. What political visions and strategies might seize the opportunities of the present conjuncture?
Keynote Address
Daisy Pitkin, "What Is a Union?"
Oct. 10, 5:00 pm
PARTICIPANTS
Rudi Batzell, Lake Forest College
Michael Billeaux-Martinez, Madison College
Cedric de Leon, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Barry Eidlin, McGill University
Ellis Garey, Brown University
Toni Gilpin, Labor Historian and Activist
Alex Gourevitch, Brown University
Mie Inouye, Bard College
Alethia Jones, City University of New York
Steven Klein, King’s College London
Ben Laurence, University of Chicago
John Lear, University of Puget Sound
Ruth Milkman, City University of New York
Daisy Pitkin, Labor Organizer and Author
Mattie Webb, Virginia Military Institute
Gabriel Winant, University of Chicago
Ahmed White, University of Wisconsin Law School
Yueran Zhang, University of Chicago
Image: Tabitha Arnold, Hot Labor Summer, 2023 (detail) / Courtesy of the artist
- The What Force on Earth research project at the Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society