Labor Notes is a media and organizing project that has been the voice of union activists who want to put the movement back in the labor movement since 1979.
Through our magazine, website, books, conferences and workshops, we promote organizing, aggressive strategies to fight concessions, alliances with workers’ centers, and unions that are run by their members.
Labor Notes is also a network of rank-and-file members, local union leaders, and labor activists who know the labor movement is worth fighting for. We encourage connections between workers in different unions, workers centers, communities, industries, and countries to strengthen the movement—from the bottom up.
That movement is needed because workers are being hit hard by their employers. We have lower real wages, less job security, and smaller, weaker unions than our mothers and fathers did.
For the most part, our leaders are doing a poor job of navigating us through the crisis. Some can’t get beyond business-as-usual; others see the need to organize by the millions, but don't believe that workers themselves need to have a say in their unions. Some unions operate only to service their members’ bread and butter needs instead of encouraging their involvement in a movement to fight the employer offensive and transform our society.
With more than 30 years of movement building behind us, Labor Notes exists as a resource for leaders and union members who want to combat these trends and chart a new course for the labor movement.
Labor Notes is best known for our monthly magazine of the same name. We report news about workers that the mainstream media doesn't find worth printing—from workers’ point of view. We explore the trends that are keeping workers on the defensive and analyze labor’s responses: what’s working and what’s not? And as an independent publication, we’re free to include the voices who say we could be doing better—and tell how.
In Labor Notes, you'll find reports on inventive organizing tactics and contract campaigns. You’ll read coverage of the people who are working to kick some life into their unions and put their fellow workers in the driver’s seat. You'll read sometimes shocking stories of workers’ struggles abroad, and inspiring stories of solidarity.
Selected articles are available online, along with subscription information.
Labor Notes books and pamphlets are handbooks full of practical guidance on battling the boss. They include A Troublemaker's Handbook 2 and Democracy is Power.
Over the years we’ve sold tens of thousands of these strategy manuals to rank-and-file activists hungry to develop new skills and union locals that have worn them out in training classes.
Click here to view our book store and purchase books to energize your organizing.
Every two years Labor Notes holds a national conference that attracts at least a thousand activists, about a tenth of them from other countries. Besides workshops on every conceivable skill and issue, there’s space for meetings of people from the same union and people with the same interests.
For a report on the 2010 Conference, which a record-breaking 1,200 activists attended, click here.
Labor Notes holds periodic Troublemakers Schools, day-long educational events. We're planning more! These schools offer a range of workshops on grassroots unionism and skills that officers and rank and filers need. Check this site for announcements of dates and locations. Or if you’d like to help build a school in your city, email schools [at] labornotes [dot] org.
We also organize workshops as needed, like our economic crisis sessions that help activists navigate the crisis and shape labor's response. Contact us if you're interested in hosting a Labor Notes workshop.
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The people behind Labor Notes.
Find out how to be an intern at Labor Notes: jane [at] labornotes [dot] org.