U.S. Labor Movement and Latin America: A History of Workers' Response to Intervention; Vol. I 1846-1919
By (Author) Philip S. Foner
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
28th February 1988
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Sociology: work and labour
Pressure groups, protest movements and non-violent action
322.20973
Hardback
238
This is history as it should be written: massive research and thorough documentation producing a story that tells itself. Recommended for academic history, labor, and Latin American studies collections. Choice Foner's book is primarily valuable as a documentary record. It pays meticulous attention to the labour and socialist press of the time. . . . [A] worthy source of information. Latin America Connexions This noted historian writes in his fluid style about the sometimes contradictory positions taken by the labor unions and socialists in response to American intervention in Central America (long before today's Contras), from the Mexican War of 1846 to the founding of the Pan-American Federation of Labor in 1918.
"Foner's book is primarily valuable as a documentary record. It pays meticulous attention to the labour and socialist press of the time. . . . [A] worthy source of information."-Latin America Connexions
Foner's book is primarily valuable as a documentary record. It pays meticulous attention to the labour and socialist press of the time. . . . [A] worthy source of information.-Latin America Connexions
This is history as it should be written: massive research and thorough documentation producing a story that tells itself. Recommended for academic history, labor, and Latin American studies collections.-Choice
"This is history as it should be written: massive research and thorough documentation producing a story that tells itself. Recommended for academic history, labor, and Latin American studies collections."-Choice