01096nam a2200289 i 450099100050982970753620230510090037.0050211s2004 it 000 0 ita d8802059543b13231571-39ule_instSet. Economiaita34611Capitale, euro e azioni, conferimenti in denaro /[a cura di Giuseppe B. Portale, Giovanni Figà-Talamanca, Marco Saverio Spolidoro]Torino :UTET,2004x, 488 p. ;25 cmTrattato delle società per azioni ;1.2SaggiCon riferimenti bibliograficiPortale, Giuseppe B.Figà-Talamanca, GiovanniSpolidoro, Marco Saverio.b1323157102-04-1425-10-04991000509829707536LE025 346 TSA I bVol. I, t. 212025000095755le025pE70.00-no00000.i1400591811-02-05Capitale-euro e azioni conferimenti in denaro751109UNISALENTOle02525-10-04ma-itait0003020nam 22003853a 450 991036765270332120250228184111.097814399177251439917728(CKB)4100000010104933(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/89037(ScCtBLL)b5444548-b0a6-47b4-a609-6b01eb80a78d(oapen)doab89037(EXLCZ)99410000001010493320250204i20192022 uu engurmn|---annantxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe Black Worker, Volume 4 The Black Worker During the Era of the American Federation of Labor and the Railroad Brotherhoods /Philip S. FonerTemple University Press2019[s.l.] :Temple University Press,2019.1 online resource (426 p.)Published over the course of six years, the eight volumes of The Black Worker: From Colonial Times to the Present contain a voluminous amount of archival material. Through their publication, Philip S. Foner, Ronald L. Lewis, and Robert Cvornyek birthed a new generation of Black labor history scholarship. Theirs was big, synthesis-style, social, political, intellectual, and institutional history that tried to capture as broadly as possible the patterns, trends, and themes that made race and class, and the Black labor experience, in particular, significant, shaping forces in United States history. With its compelling perspective on the salience of Black labor history along with its sheer breadth and depth, The Black Worker was and is required reading for students of labor and working-class history and African American history. Prior to publication of The Black Worker, Black workers were largely absent from or mere footnotes in established histories; dominant narratives presented a "house of labor" occupied primarily if not exclusively by white, male, industrial workers. These accounts paid little attention to unions' widespread practice of racial exclusion and discrimination, nor to attempts by Black workers to organize their own labor. Through its documentation of these practices, The Black Worker in no small part helped to bring about acknowledgment of these practices and the start of inclusiveness. Inserting the voices and actions of the marginal into the canon of history was of monumental importance. By incorporating new voices into the standard chronology of American labor history, The Black Worker helped to push the field to revise its core keywords and conceptual underpinnings.Industrial arbitration & negotiationbicsscIndustrial arbitration & negotiationIndustrial arbitration & negotiationFoner Philip Sheldon1910-1994,243429ScCtBLLScCtBLLBOOK9910367652703321The Black Worker, Volume 44321728UNINA