TY - JOUR T1 - Hold That Line: The New Orleans Police Strikes JF - Criminal Justice Policy Review Y1 - 2015 A1 - Wigginton, Michael Peter A1 - Carl Julius Jensen A1 - Jessica Michele Vinson KW - collective bargaining KW - New Orleans KW - police strike KW - police union KW - union AB -

In February 1979, the New Orleans Police Department was engaged in two work stoppages that were orchestrated by the Police Association of New Orleans (PANO). During this period, PANO was affiliated with the International Teamsters Union, which allegedly had ties to organized crime. This study addresses the causes of the police strikes, the right of public safety personnel to strike, and how the “gangster” image of the Teamsters adversely affected the labor negotiations. The authors conducted personal, semistructured interviews of individuals who participated in the labor talks, as well as an extensive review of the literature. According to respondents, the primary causes of the strike were low wages and the refusal of city officials to recognize the police union and enter into meaningful collective bargaining negotiations.

VL - 26 L2 - eng CP - 3 ER - TY - BOOK T1 - Working in the Big Easy: The History and Politics of Labor in New Orleans Y1 - 2014 A1 - Thomas J. Adams A1 - Steve Striffler KW - low-wage workers KW - New Orleans KW - slave labor KW - slave markets AB -

Following the labors of slaves and service workers, voodoo practitioners and dockworkers, new immigrants and streetcar drivers, independent African-American businesswomen and unionized musicians this book uncovers the forgotten stories of those who made New Orleans the city it was and is. The diverse contributions to this book illuminate the lives of those whose everyday work contributed to the city's distinct history, culture, and politics. The slave markets of the 18th and 19th Centuries famous across the Atlantic, the waterfront that brought the world's people and goods to the mouth of the Mississippi, the dishes central to the city's world famous cuisine, the daily practices of its indigenous religion, the music that has made the city a global icon, and the reconstruction following the tragedies of Hurricane Katrina are all, as Working in the Big Easy shows, processes and practices of work and labor. By placing the history and politics of both slave and wage labor at the heart of our understanding of the city, Working in the Big Easy will fascinate all those interested in New Orleans as well as change the way scholars across disciplines understand the city.

PB - University of Louisiana at Lafayette Press CY - Lafayette, LA L2 - eng ER -