1st Edition

Unions and Class Transformation The Case of the Broadway Musicians

By Catherine P. Mulder Copyright 2009
    162 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    162 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    How can unions move from a defensive strategy to one of class transformation? Mulder demonstrates how the current union strategies of class blindness lead to weak and often unintended results. Unions, she argues, do not use their collective power for class transformation and union commentators/critics do not theorize about unions as possible agents for such class transformations. Using the case study of the Broadway musicians’ union, Mulder shows how unions can facilitate a class transformation that increases workers’ control over their working conditions and enables them to make the changes needed to improve their lives. This innovative and needed study will be of interest to labor economists, scholars of class and labor, and those interested in the plight of unions and the potential they still hold for social and economic transformations.

    1. Unions and Class Transformation: The Case of the Broadway Musicians  2. The Broadway Musicians:  A Case Study  3. Subjects of Concern for Broadway Musicians  4. Class Transformation  5. Post Class Transformation: Applications on Broadway and Beyond.  Appendix A: Memorandum of Agreement between the League of American Theatres & Producers, B.V. Theatrical Ventures, Inc., Musical Rights Inc. and Associated Musicians of Greater New York, Local 802, AFM, AFL-CIO.  Appendix B: League of American Theatres and Producers Proposals to Local 802, AFM.  Appendix C: Theatre Statistics and Minimums: For Contracts Expiring 1993-2013.  Appendix D: Orchestra Costs for the Week of January 5, 2003

    Biography

    Catherine P. Mulder is Assistant Professor in the Department of Economics at John Jay College of Criminal Justice.