From Wagner to Taft-Hartley: The Rise and Fall of Labor

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Issue:

American History

 

Written by:

Robert L

 

Date added:

January 30, 2015

 

Level:

University

 

Grade:

A

 

No of pages / words:

25 / 6802

 

Was viewed:

7406 times

 

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Essay content:

The impact on American workers was immediate and devastating. An estimated 2.5 million people were jobless within the first two weeks of the crash, and by January 1931, the figure had risen to 8 million (Piven & Cloward, 1979, 45-46). In 1932, Franklin Delano Roosevelt was elected President on the strength of his bold new vision of how modern government should operate, as well as its relationship with the individual...
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His philosophy of New Deal Liberalism sought to redefine the social contract between the individual and government. Appealing to the great masses of unemployed Americans, Roosevelt spoke of a new “economic constitutional order” whereby the government would guarantee the individual protection from an increasingly uncertain marketplace; thus, “security was to be the new self-evident truth of political life in the United States” (Milkis & Mileur, 2002, 3)...
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