2019
DOI: 10.1017/s0898588x19000117
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Urban Regimes and the Policing of Strikes in Two Gilded Age Cities: New York and Chicago

Abstract: Since the 1980s, scholars have argued that during the Gilded Age urban party machines incorporated working people through the use of patronage, informal provision of personal welfare, and limited concessions, thereby eliminating sustained labor and Socialist Party alternatives and keeping workers’ militancy and assertiveness confined to the workplace. That view is challenged by a historical comparison of the policing of labor disputes in New York and Chicago. In New York, organized workers were eliminated from… Show more

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