labor movement

NOUN
  1. an organized attempt by workers to improve their status by united action (particularly via labor unions) or the leaders of this movement
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How To Use labor movement In A Sentence

  • In short, the attitudes of both the social elite and the labor movement have served to hinder economic growth.
  • These forces have also weakened labor movements in many other industrial countries.
  • That same impulse brought the entire Canadian labor movement out in force.
  • Your situation highlights the tragedy of the American labor movement and the dilemma facing the working class today.
  • The emerging labor movement threw itself into local politics with enthusiasm.
  • Jouhaux once again worked from the very first days of the war to bring the labor movement to exert its influence to make the eventual peace a true one. The Nobel Peace Prize 1951 - Presentation Speech
  • Unless the labor movement figures out how to broaden its appeal, both programmatically and structurally, we will never reach the organizing goals we have set for ourselves.
  • For Trotsky, what determined his attitude to all tendencies within the Russian social democratic labor movement was their perspective, their program.
  • I think an argument could be made that Ohio, an old line labor state, has lost jobs to Tupelo and Canton, MS (Toyota and Nissan), and Birmingham (Mercedes) because the American labor movement is totally outdates and has failed to adopt to a changing international market. "The battle for the Democratic Party is so bitter because it is a battle over culture."
  • The early labor movement in this country which led to unions is a good example. An Introduction to Community Health
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