Labor Relations Chapter 3
What were the results of the Memphis sanitation strike?
A nondiscrimination clause Promotions based on seniority rather than racism Improved wages
By the end of 1940s, the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) unions were becoming centralized. What followed this movement?
A shift from community-based to workplace-based unionism
Which of the following was part of the strikes in 1934 in which workers clashed with employers who refused to recognize their independent unions?
A successful strike for recognition at a Toledo auto parts plant resulted in an extended battle between strikers and the Ohio National Guard.
a closed shop
A workplace that denies access to all except union members, with the union regulating who can become a member
an open shop
A workplace that has a completely nonunion operation of employees selected by the employer
In response to the perceived failure of the Knights of Labor's leadership to address everyday working issues, representatives from 25 national unions created a new labor federation in December 1886 called the _____.
American Federation of Labor (AFL)
What contributed to the failure of the 1919 steel strike?
Attempting to organize the industry along craft lines with 24 different unions
In Memphis, over 1,000 black sanitation workers went on strike following the 1968 killing of two African American sanitation workers by an unsafe garbage compactor. Which of the following were demanded by the participants in the Memphis sanitation strike for two months?
Civil rights and respect Enhanced wages and working conditions
Which of the following statements shows the difference between the American Federation of Labor (AFL) and the Knights of Labor?
Each union that joined the AFL was explicitly granted the freedom to manage its own affairs.
Identify the events that followed the crashing of the stock market on October 24, 1929.
Farmers were out of business because of weak farm prices. The economy plunged into the Great Depression.
What was the result of the United Auto Workers (UAW) strike at General Motors during the Great Strike Wave of 1945-46?
General Motors did not open its financial books.
John L Lewis
He aspired to aggressively organize the steel industry to strengthen his union's power in coal.
Big Bill Hutcheson
He desired jurisdiction over any worker who worked with wood regardless of industry.
Which of the following resulted from the functioning of the National War Labor Board (NWLB) that was created by President Roosevelt?
In return for enhanced workplace security, organized labor essentially traded its right to strike. A bureaucratic form of unionism was formed.
Which of the following is considered the effect of the radicalism of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)?
Increased employer hostility toward labor unions
From 1905 to 1925, the visible radical and militant approach adopted by labor leaders was that of the _____, often referred to by its nickname the "Wobblies."
Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)
Which of the following are effects of the postwar model of union representation?
Injury rates increased. Grievance resolution became more formal.
What is the significance of the National Labor Union in the context of U.S. labor organizations?
It created a precedent for the labor movement by integrating different unions into a single federation.
Identify the statements that refer to the significance of the Great Uprising of 1877.
It demonstrated pent-up grievances of workers fighting with the forces of industrialization and the conflict between labor and capital. It illustrates the common concerns of workers and is frequently used to define the initiation of the modern era in U.S. labor relations.
Identify a true statement about the National War Labor Board (NWLB) that was created by President Roosevelt.
It developed fringe benefits such as shift differentials, holiday pay, and health insurance benefits to work around wage controls.
Identify a true statement about the American Federation of Labor (AFL).
It did not have the formal power to force rulings on the member unions.
In the name of individual liberty as part of the open shop movement, what were the collective efforts of the Citizens Alliance?
It formed a trade school to educate skilled workers who were also educated about the importance of individualism. It blacklisted people who supported labor unions. It had a functional network of hundreds of labor spies.
Identify a true statement about a general labor union.
It frequently represents diverse occupations and industries.
Identify a true statement about the Knights of Labor.
It placed emphasis on secrecy to prohibit employers from breaking it.
Identify a feature of revolutionary unionism that was followed by the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW).
It rejects, or tends to reject, the existing institutional order, especially individual ownership of production means, and the wage system.
What were the functions of the American Federation of Labor (AFL)?
It resolved jurisdictional disputes when multiple unions wanted to represent the same group of workers. It acted as a support organization for the independent labor unions.
Identify a true statement about the Great Strike Wave of 1945-46.
It resulted in major changes in the Wagner Act through the passage of the Taft-Hartley Act.
Identify a true statement about the business unionism philosophy, which was followed by the American Federation of Labor (AFL).
It seeks to win labor's fair share of profits through collective bargaining supported by the threat of striking.
Identify the true statements about the Wagner Act of 1935.
It supported unionization. It enacted legal protections for workers.
Identify a true statement about the National Labor Union.
It was the first national labor federation in the United States that represented unions from various occupations or industries.
Which of the following shows the significance of the Knights of Labor as a labor organization?
It was the most powerful labor union in the United States with 700,000 members in 1886.
In the context of welfare capitalism, identify a true statement about employee representation programs such as the Rockefeller Plan.
Managers and workers gather to discuss work issues, but they are instituted and often run by firms.
Which of the following events is associated with the Haymarket Tragedy, which was the most famous event associated with the Knights of Labor?
Numerous strikes occurred in 1886 to support the May 1 deadline, established by the forerunner of the American Federation of Labor as the effective date for the eight-hour working day.
Which of the following events are part of the Great Uprising of 1877?
Opposing a 10 percent wage cut, workers on railroads went on strike. Thousands of workers went on general strikes that shut down many businesses in Chicago and St. Louis.
What were the causes of the Great Strike Wave of 1945-46?
Reduced employee earnings with the inevitable postwar production slowdown A renewed drive by management to reassert its workplace control and cost discipline
Arrange the events that led to the end of the General Motors sit-down strike in the correct order of occurrence.
The Battle of the Running Bulls ended. The governor ordered the National Guard to Flint to preserve peace, and a stalemate ensued. General Motors agreed to recognize the United Auto Workers (UAW) on February 11, 1937. The six-week General Motors sit-down strike ended.
Which of the following statements refers to the situation of labor relations in the 21st century?
The density of private-sector unions has dropped to less than 10 percent.
Which of the following shows the condition of the United States by 1933 after the stock market crashed on October 24, 1929?
The gross national product reduced by 29 percent.
Which of the following was clearly revealed in the 1919 steel strike?
The mismatch between craft unionism and the emerging modern workplace
Which of the following was a primary concern of the Knights of Labor?
The moral value, not merely the material wealth, of a worker
What led to the recognition of the United Auto Workers (UAW) that ended the General Motors sit-down strike?
The refusal of the governor to order the National Guard to forcibly evacuate the Chevrolet plants
Which of the following events was part of the Homestead strike in 1892?
The steel mill owned by Andrew Carnegie in Pennsylvania was shut down when the union refused to accept 12-15 percent wage cuts.
The old-line, conservative craft union leaders
They looked down on the unskilled mass-production workers and saw industrial unionism as a threat to their own power.
The leaders of unions that were already organized along industrial lines
They were led by the president of the United Mine Workers, John L. Lewis.
What was the objective of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)?
To create "One Big Union" that accepted all workers across all industries
What was the function of the National War Labor Board (NWLB) that was created by President Roosevelt?
To find solutions to labor disputes to keep war production moving
What was the mission of the "One Big Union," which was the objective of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)??
To involve in a class struggle with capitalists
What was the ultimate objective of the Knights of Labor?
To replace capitalism with a system of producer cooperatives in which producers would own and manage businesses
Which of the following is part of the postwar model of union representation?
Unions could not be involved in production decisions.
By 1941 union membership tripled to about 8.4 million, or 23 percent of workers. This explosion in union membership was certainly connected to the new legal protections of the _____ of 1935.
Wagner act
Which of the following was part of the United Auto Workers (UAW) strike at General Motors during the Great Strike Wave of 1945-46?
Walter Reuther, the leader of the UAW, wanted General Motors to open its financial books when it claimed that a 30 percent wage increase is unaffordable.
Which of the following is considered the biggest victory of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)?
Which of the following is considered the biggest victory of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)?
In the context of the General Motors sit-down strike, which of the following events ended the Battle of the Running Bulls?
Women broke through the police lines and joined the picket line in front of a Chevrolet plant.
Which of the following was an effect of the movement of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) unions from community-based to workplace-based unionism?
Women were downgraded to marginal roles.
The American Federation of Labor (AFL) and its affiliated unions are the classic example of a(n) blank blank , which emphasizes immediate improvements in basic employment conditions—wages, hours, and working conditions.
business unionism
After the organizing drives of the Committee for Industrial Organization (CIO) resulted in viable unions, it formally became the blank blank blank blank (CIO) in 1938
congress of industrial organizations
Which of the following philosophies reflected the industrial world of a half-century earlier: small shops, a simple technology, and the highly skilled workman?
craft unionism
The structure of the American Federation of Labor (AFL) unions was guided by the principle of blank blank in which only one union should represent workers in a craft.
exclusive jurisdiction
True or false: In the 21st century, craft unionism and industrial unionism have largely replaced general unionism.
false
True or false: In the 21st century, globalization continues to strengthen labor's bargaining power without putting domestic workers into competition with low-cost alternatives.
false
True or false: The Knights of Labor was directly involved in the Haymarket Tragedy.
false
True or false: The National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) in 1933 discouraged workers from forming unions.
false
True or false: The wave of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) energy was limited to the industrial centers of the Midwest.
false
One of the most violent examples of the struggle that revolved around employers' efforts to weaken the American Federation of Labor's (AFL's) desired level of workplace control was the _____ in 1892 at the steel mill owned by Andrew Carnegie in Pennsylvania.
homestead strike
Unlike craft unionism blank blank is a philosophy that seeks to organize all the workers in a workplace or industry regardless of their occupations or skill levels.
industrial unionism
As part of the open shop movement, employers used the rhetoric of individual liberty to argue that _____.
labor unions should be restricted from interfering with management's control of its business
In the context of the postwar model of labor relations, the expulsion of communist-controlled unions from the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) _____.
led to raiding attempts as CIO unions tried to win bargaining rights in units represented by the dismissed unions
A concerted drive by employers and their employers' associations in the early 1900s to create and maintain union-free workplaces is called the blank blank movement
open shop
The most controversial attribute of welfare capitalism, then and now, was the attempt to _____.
provide employee voice or industrial democracy via employee representation programs or company unions
The Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) is the major U.S. example of blank blank a philosophy that emphasizes the complete harmony of interests of all wage workers as against the representatives of the employing class, and seeks to unite the former, skilled and unskilled together, into one homogeneous fighting organization.
revolutionary unionism
The drive for individual liberty under the open shop movement was conducted by _____.
sophisticated local and national associations of powerful employers and employers' associations
The visible radical and militant approach adopted by labor leaders of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) was in response to _____.
the violent repression of strikes and labor demonstrations that were publicly labeled as radical by judges and the armed forces
True or false: Based on one's viewpoint, welfare capitalism signifies either a sophisticated managerial strategy to control the workplace and prevent unionization, or the beginnings of today's strategic human resource management and high-performance workplaces.
true
True or false: The Knights of Labor emphasized cooperation and education to achieve its goals.
true
True or false: The beliefs and strategies of Samuel Gompers, the American Federation of Labor (AFL), and its member unions dominated U.S. labor relations until the Great Depression in the 1930s.
true
True or false: The largely bureaucratic nature of U.S. unions was cemented in the late 1940s and 1950s when opposition groups within the major Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) unions were driven out under the guise of rooting out communists during the beginnings of the Cold War.
true
The Knights of Labor is traditionally considered the major U.S. example of a blank blank philosophy in which a union "aspires chiefly to elevate the moral, intellectual, and social life of the worker."
uplift unionism
The open shop movement portrayed labor unions as _____.
violating individual freedom by denying workers the power to choose where to work and on what terms
blank blank sought to win worker loyalty and increase efficiency by improving supervisory practices, implementing orderly hiring and firing procedures, providing wage incentives, offering protective insurance benefits, creating a positive culture, improving the physical work environment and safety, and providing employee voice.
welfare capitalism
The watershed General Motors sit-down strike started in December 1936 when _____.
workers in Flint, Michigan, took over two Chevrolet plants by sitting down and refusing to work or vacate the plant