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The AFLCIO and Organized Labor Regeneration

es. For now, it seems the best that organized labor can hope for is overcome the dinosaur image and hope to be needed again. Works citedAFL-CIO Home page. 15Apr. 2001 *http://www.afl-cio.org*.Borgers, F. “The challenges of economic globalization for U.S. labor.” Critical Society 22 (1996): 67-88.Clawson, Dan. Clawson, Mary Ann. “What has happened to the US labor movement?” Annual Review of Sociology. (1999): 95-134.Cornfield, Daniel. “Shifts in Public Approval of Labor Unions in the United States.” Gallup Organization . 15 Apr 2001 *http://www.gallup.com*.Foerster, A. “Don’t whine. Organize!” Presented at Annual Meeting Am. Soc. Assoc. New York, 1996. Hurd, Richard. “Contesting the dinosaur image: the labor movement’s search for a future.” Labor Studies Journal 22 (1998): 5-32. Internal Revenue Service. Home page. 12Apr. 2001 *http://www.irs.gov*.Johnson, Paul. “Organized labor in an era of blue collar decline.” Interest Group Politics 3rd Edition. Ed. Burdett Loomis. Allan Cigler. Washington, D.C.: CQ Press, 1991. 33-60.Johnson, Paul. “Interest group recruiting: finding members and keeping them.” Interest Group Politics 5th Edition. Ed. Burdett Loomis. Allan Cigler. Washington, D.C.: CQ Press, 1998. 35-62.Lipset, Seymour. Unions in Transition. San Francisco: ICS Press, 1986. McMenamin, Micheal. “Labor Lost: declining influence of labor unions.” Reason Nov. 2000: 47-57. Sheets, Kenneth. “Labor’s agenda for the ‘90s; gimmicks and bottom fishing’ may not halt the decline.” U.S. News &World Report Mar. 1990: 37-41....

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