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Encyclopedia > Organized labour

The labor movement (or labour movement) is a broad term for the development of a collective organization of working people, to campaign in their own interest for better treatment from their employers and political governments. Labor unions and trade unions are common names for the specific collective organizations within societies, organized for the purpose of representing the interests of workers and the working class. Many elite-class individuals and political groups may also be active in and part of the labour movement.

Articles related to
the Labor movement
Child labor
Labor in economics
Labor history
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Labor rights
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Strike
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See Labor history
The labour movement began in Europe during the industrial revolution, when agricultural jobs declined and employment moved to more industrial areas. The idea met with great resistance. In the eighteenth and early nineteenth century groups such as the English Tolpuddle Martyrs were transported for forming unions, which was against the laws of the time.


Throughout the world, the labour movement has been responsible for reformation and worker's rights, such as the 2-day weekend, minimum wage, and paid holidays. There have been many important labor activists in modern history who have caused changes that were revolutionary at the time and are now regarded as basic. For example, Mary Harris Jones, better known as Mother Jones, was central in the campaign to end child labor in the United States during the early 20th century.


As labour markets, and working classes are often limited by national borders, labour movements are also often limited by national boundaries. The Australian labour movement is an example of a labour movement that has grown and existed in a particular national context.


A popular bumper sticker in the United States in the 1990s was, "The labor movement; the folks that brought you the weekend."


Literature

Robert N. Stern, Daniel B. Cornfield, The U.S. labor movement:References and Resources , G.K. Hall & Co 1996


See also

External Links

Global online communication for a democratic, independent labor movement (http://www.labornet.org/)


  Results from FactBites:
 
Labour Unions and the Right to Collectively Demand Rights (526 words)
Labour unions are said to be a manifestation of such collective strength.
Since the Dergue, 'mass organizations' such as labour unions, urban dwellers associations, youth associations, women's associations, etc, started being organized to be used as additional instruments of suppression by the government rather than to benefit their membership.
The labour organizations in the country therefore are not particularly noted for their fight for the rights of their members.
Canadian Labor Party - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (857 words)
It was intended to be the Canadian equivalent of the British Labour Party, and endorsed a variety of reformist labour initiatives.
Its provincial organizations joined the CLP in various stages between 1922 and 1924, and the leaders of the Communist Party believed that they would eventually be able to shift CLP policy to reflect their own policies.
The party may, however, be regarded as a prototype for later pan-Canadian labour parties such as the CCF and the New Democratic Party.
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