The history of the American workers movement is a brief history of the movement of American workers from the end of the 18th century to the present. In 1881, the organizational labor movement began to be strengthened. People from several industries, such as carpenters, cigar manufacturers, printers, merchants, steel workers, gathered together to form an organized labor union and trade union federation. It has little power, but the organization is contemptor and worker.
The American labor history represents the history of organized labor in the United States, the American labor law, and the more general history of workers. Since the 1930s, labor unions have become an important part of the Democratic Party. However, compared to Western Europe, some historians still do not understand why there is no Labor Party in America. The nature and strength of organized workforce is the result of historical tension in reaction force, including workplace rights, wages, working hours, political expression, labor law and other working conditions. Organized labor unions and their comprehensive labor federations, such as the AFL-CIO and the City Federation, are responsible for competing, evolving, merging and splitting under the influence of values and priorities, and under the usual intervention of the federal government to hold.
History of the Workers' Movement Since the start of industrialization in the United States, the struggle between the rights of industrial and manufacturing workers and the benefits of these efforts is furious. Due to the arrival of different era of history, the American labor movement has had various degrees of success. The fate of the American labor movement has gradually calmed down with other important elements of American society. In times when human rights and individual rights became the national priority, the labor movement was prosperous, the labor movement had been swaying in the era of prioritizing business and profitability.
But over the past 30 years, vibrant and sustained workforce has consisted of naked people. Everyone who is interested in American civil rights and labor should know that the history of this movement is not only attractive but also encouraging. From COYOTE (aka Old Tired Ethics) founded by Margo St. James in 1973, sex workers fought hard everywhere, from blogs, online mailing lists and networks of modern nonprofit organizations. However, we achieved amazing results. Succeeded. In the historic struggle of coal miners, clothes workers and outdoor workers, even though their lives and health are not being evaluated by society, at least work is considered important. Even the most rebel politicians will not rise before the group of voters and the society will claim to be better without clothes and fresh vegetables.