A conversation about workers, communities and social justice

  • Worker Coops and Labor, Past and Future

    Worker Coops and Labor, Past and Future

    By Liam K. Lynch In a city becoming increasingly unaffordable and out of touch with the needs of city workers, and an urban society based in consumption, hyper-gentrification, luxury, commercial and tourist real estate, the need for economic alternatives and an offensive strategy to combat unsustainable practices looms large. A study published earlier this year by the Center for Economic…

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  • THE GOOSEBUMPS ON RABBIT’S NECK IN CLEAR WRAP

    THE GOOSEBUMPS ON RABBIT’S NECK IN CLEAR WRAP

    By Linda Ashok We are done weighing- A kilo of pomegranate and guavas Potatoes discounted at INR 28 a kilo Sprigs of lotuses, 250 grams of masoor, chillies and that’s it. After my grandpa’s demise, my mother Was worried if fish will ever become a part of our meal again. His pension was the only…

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  • Murphy Alum Featured in Public Employee Press

    Murphy Alum Featured in Public Employee Press

    This past summer, Tracye Hawthorne, graduate of Murphy’s Cornell/CUNY Labor Relations Certificate Program, was featured in DC37’s Public Employee Press. The article, entitled The Making of an Activist, describes Hawthorne’s journey to becoming shop steward at Clerical-Administrative Employees Local 1549. From the profile, by Gregory N. Heires: Arkansas – (a “right-to-work” for less state that prohibits…

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  • New York Power

    New York Power

    By Joseph J. Cunningham The following is an excerpt from Murphy adjunct Prof. Joseph J. Cunningham’s new book New York Power, which tells the story of the development of today’s New York City electric utility system. New York City has long represented one of the most concentrated urban developments in the world. That density has…

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