Ilr Press imprint: 133 books

Juki Girls, Good Girls

Gender and Cultural Politics in Sri Lanka's Global Garment Industry

by Caitrin Lynch
Language: English
Release Date: December 15, 2009

When a government program brought garment factories to rural Sri Lanka, women workers found themselves caught between the pressures of a globalizing economy and societal expectations that villages are sanctuaries of tradition. These women learned quickly to resist the characterization of "Juki girls"—female...

Making Mondragón

The Growth and Dynamics of the Worker Cooperative Complex

by William Foote Whyte, Kathleen King Whyte
Language: English
Release Date: December 15, 2009

Since its founding in 1956 in Spain's Basque region, the Mondragón Corporation has been a touchstone for the international cooperative movement. Its nearly three hundred companies and organizations span areas from finance to education. In its industrial sector Mondragón has had a rich experience...
by Susan Eisenberg
Language: English
Release Date: May 15, 2018

The fiercely lyrical poetry of Stanley’s Girl is rooted in Susan Eisenberg’s experience as one of the first women to enter the construction industry and from her decades gathering accounts of others to give scaffolding to that history. Eisenberg charts her own induction into the construction workplace...

Conflicting Commitments

The Politics of Enforcing Immigrant Worker Rights in San Jose and Houston

by Shannon Gleeson
Language: English
Release Date: October 15, 2012

In Conflicting Commitments, Shannon Gleeson goes beyond the debate over federal immigration policy to examine the complicated terrain of immigrant worker rights. Federal law requires that basic labor standards apply to all workers, yet this principle clashes with increasingly restrictive immigration...

Talking about Machines

An Ethnography of a Modern Job

by Julian E. Orr
Language: English
Release Date: October 1, 2016

This is a story of how work gets done. It is also a study of how field service technicians talk about their work and how that talk is instrumental in their success. In his innovative ethnography, Julian E. Orr studies the people who repair photocopiers and shares vignettes from their daily lives....

Voices in the Band

A Doctor, Her Patients, and How the Outlook on AIDS Care Changed from Doomed to Hopeful

by Susan C. Ball
Language: English
Release Date: April 22, 2015

"I am an AIDS doctor. When I began that work in 1992, we knew what caused AIDS, how it spread, and how to avoid getting it, but we didn't know how to treat it or how to prevent our patients' seemingly inevitable progression toward death. The stigma that surrounded AIDS patients from the very beginning...

Achieving Access

Professional Movements and the Politics of Health Universalism

by Joseph Harris
Language: English
Release Date: September 15, 2017

At a time when the world’s wealthiest nations struggle to make health care and medicine available to everyone, why do resource-constrained countries make costly commitments to universal health coverage and AIDS treatment after transitioning to democracy? Joseph Harris explores the dynamics that...

The Challenge to Change

Reforming Health Care on the Front Line in the United States and the United Kingdom

by Rebecca Kolins Givan
Language: English
Release Date: September 20, 2016

There is constant pressure on hospitals to improve health care delivery and increase cost effectiveness. New initiatives are the order of the day in the dramatically different health care systems of the United States and Great Britain. Often, as we know all too well, these efforts are not successful....

Immigrant Girl, Radical Woman

A Memoir from the Early Twentieth Century

by Matilda Rabinowitz, Ileen A. DeVault
Language: English
Release Date: October 15, 2017

Matilda Rabinowitz’s illustrated memoir challenges assumptions about the lives of early twentieth-century women. In Immigrant Girl, Radical Woman, Rabinowitz describes the ways in which she and her contemporaries rejected the intellectual and social restrictions imposed on women as they sought political...

A Fight for the Soul of Public Education

The Story of the Chicago Teachers Strike

by Steven Ashby, Robert Bruno
Language: English
Release Date: November 4, 2016

In reaction to the changes imposed on public schools across the country in the name of "education reform," the Chicago Teachers Union redefined its traditional role and waged a multidimensional fight that produced a community-wide school strike and transformed the scope of collective bargaining into...

The Broken Village

Coffee, Migration, and Globalization in Honduras

by Daniel R. Reichman
Language: English
Release Date: December 15, 2009

In The Broken Village, Daniel R. Reichman tells the story of a remote village in Honduras that transformed almost overnight from a sleepy coffee-growing community to a hotbed of undocumented migration to and from the United States. The small village—called here by the pseudonym La Quebrada—was...

The Origins of Right to Work

Antilabor Democracy in Nineteenth-Century Chicago

by Cedric de Leon
Language: English
Release Date: May 21, 2015

"Right to work" states weaken collective bargaining rights and limit the ability of unions to effectively advocate on behalf of workers. As more and more states consider enacting right-to-work laws, observers trace the contemporary attack on organized labor to the 1980s and the Reagan era. In The...

Solidarity Transformed

Labor Responses to Globalization and Crisis in Latin America

by Mark S. Anner
Language: English
Release Date: December 15, 2009

Mark S. Anner spent ten years working with labor unions in Latin America and returned to conduct eighteen months of field research: he found himself in the middle of violent raids, was detained and interrogated in a Salvadoran basement prison cell, and survived a bombing in a union cafeteria. This...

The Changing Face of Medicine

Women Doctors and the Evolution of Health Care in America

by Ann K. Boulis, Jerry A. Jacobs
Language: English
Release Date: December 15, 2009

The number of women practicing medicine in the United States has grown steadily since the late 1960s, with women now roughly at parity with men among entering medical students. Why did so many women enter American medicine? How are women faring, professionally and personally, once they become physicians?...
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