Blue-Green Coalitions: Fighting for Safe Workplaces and Healthy Communities

Author:   Brian Mayer
Publisher:   Cornell University Press
ISBN:  

9780801447228


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   13 October 2008
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
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Blue-Green Coalitions: Fighting for Safe Workplaces and Healthy Communities


Overview

What do unions and environmental groups have to gain by working together and how do they overcome their differences? In Blue-Green Coalitions, Brian Mayer answers these questions by focusing on the role that health-related issues have played in creating a common ground between the two groups. By recognizing that the same toxics that cause workplace hazards escape into surrounding communities and the environment, workers and environmentalists are able to collaborate for the protection of all. Mayer examines three contemporary cases of successful labor-environmental alliances to demonstrate how health and safety issues are used to create durable and politically influential social movement coalitions: *Alliance for a Healthy Tomorrow, a coalition of environmental, labor, community, and public health organizations in Massachusetts that has developed a successful prevention-based approach to safe workplaces and a clean environment; *the Work Environment Council in New Jersey, which succeeded in passing the first statewide right-to-know law and concentrates on protecting citizens from the dangerous toxics generated by the state's chemical industries; *the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition, an organization that began in the 1980s fighting hazardous high-tech practices that were affecting the Valley residents and the high-tech industry's largely immigrant workforce. In Mayer's ethnographic accounts of the challenging work of bringing these blue-green coalitions together, it becomes clear that stereotypes about environmentalists and workers are largely irrelevant when thinking about who is at risk of exposure to dangerous toxic substances. Both movements share a common concern for protecting their members' health from toxic hazards that are by-products of the modern industrial economy.

Full Product Details

Author:   Brian Mayer
Publisher:   Cornell University Press
Imprint:   ILR Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.454kg
ISBN:  

9780801447228


ISBN 10:   0801447224
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   13 October 2008
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Brian Mayer has written a thoughtful, important book about the problems and possibilities of building a broad-based public health movement. Blue-Green Coalitions builds on the growing literature about links between trade unions and other worker organizations with the environmental movement. Through three case studies of grassroots coalitions, Mayer develops an argument that health is an effective cross-movement framing strategy. The political lessons he derives are important for progressive organizers, for those concerned with environmental justice, and for those hoping for a rejuvenated labor movement. This is an intelligent and complex book, well worth careful reading. -Charles Levenstein, University of Massachusetts Lowell


Blue-Green Coalitions provides important insights that a wide variety of environmental coalitions and labor groups across the country can learn from. Brian Mayer provides a sophisticated analysis of labor/environmental coalitions and the reasons they succeed or fail, adapt to new political and social and economic conditions or not, and grow or stagnate. Throughout, Mayer shows that concerns about health can be the nexus around which cooperation can be encouraged and achieved. This is an important book for activists and scholars alike. Gerald Markowitz, Distinguished Professor of History, John Jay College, CUNY


Author Information

Brian Mayer is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Florida.

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