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DESCRIPTION:6th Annual LaborFest BookFair \n\n10:00 - 11:30 AM \n (3rd floor Room A)\nA 
 Desire Path By Jan Shapin\nSet in the class struggles of the 1930s through 
 the 1950s, this novel deals with the shifting relationships between a union 
 organizer, a journalist (based on the real life Anna Louise Strong) and the 
 wife of a union lawyer. Shapin weaves a story of CIO organizing in the 
 1930s, the post-war witch hunts, and how those events affected not only 
 political life but the lives of those in the middle of the struggle. Shapin 
 will talk about labor history from a fictional perspective, read from her 
 novel and discuss the history and political issues on which A Desire Path 
 is 
 based.\nhttp://www.janshapin.com/\nhttp://www.stourwater.com/ALS/\n\n(3rd 
 floor Room B)\nLettuce Wars, Ten Years of Work and Struggle \n By Bruce 
 Neuburger\nIn this important work we learn about the real history of the 
 United Farmworkers of America from the eyes of an activist member. What 
 happened to one of the most vibrant union organizing of farmworkers in the 
 United States and how did the UFWA become a shadow of itself? Neuburger 
 also recounts how non-farmworkers were brought into the leadership of the 
 UFWA to replace the actual farmworker organizers and the end of the 
 possibility of democracy and rank and file 
 power.\nhttp://www.lettucewars.net/p/author-bio.html\n\n(First floor 
 theater)\nGuest Workers or Colonized Labor?\n By Gilbert Gonzalez\nHe will 
 discusses the historical causes of immigration of Mexican workers to the 
 United States. He shows that the economic development of US capitalism 
 required a cheap labor force from Mexico, and this in fact, led to the mass 
 uprooting of peasants and small farmers in Mexico who were forced to the US 
 by big corporate interests. Gonzalez exposes the real economic implications 
 of NAFTA which like the other trade agreements including the present Trans 
 Pacific Partnership TPP bill provide the framework for greater exploitation 
 of labor and the destruction of economies throughout the world for 
 privatization and union 
 busting.\nhttp://labor.ihr.ucsc.edu/labor-and-immigration-working-group/gilbert-gonzales/\n\n12:00 
 - 1:30 PM \n(3rd floor Room A)\nWind Over Water \n Edited by Keiko 
 Yamanaka\nUC Lecturer Keiko Yamanaka will present her work Wind Over Water 
 about the migration of workers in Southeast Asia and how this migration of 
 migrants is changing the face of countries in the region.  
 \nhttp://www.keikoyamanaka.info/\n\n(3rd floor Room B)\nThe Wobblies in San 
 Pedro\n By Art Almeida\nRetired ILWU Local 13 longshore worker Art Almeida 
 from Los Angeles will talk about the role of Wobblies on the waterfront in 
 San Pedro and how they helped shape the formation of the ILWU. He will be 
 joined by Herb Mills, the retired Secretary Treasurer of ILWU Local 10 in 
 San Francisco. The history of Local 10 and it’s democratic traditions 
 were shaped as well by the Wobblie influence, which in Local 10 has meant 
 leadership elections once a year and a two term limit on top positions in 
 the local.\n\n(First floor theater) \nImmigration Reform, “Guest” & 
 Temporary Workers and the Labor Movement - Panel\nThe scapegoating and 
 exploitation of immigrant workers in the United States has a long history. 
 This panel will look at the history of immigration from Latin America to 
 the United States and the role of the Bracero Program, “guest worker” 
 programs, and the new “immigration reform” that is being discussed and 
 debated by working people and the US Congress. It will also look at the 
 role of US unions in this debate.\nPanelists: \n Gilbert Gonzalez, UCI 
 professor; Don Mitchell, Syracuse University professor; Al Rojas, LCLAA, 
 labor organizer; Manny Ness, CUNY professor; Norm Mattloff, UCD professor, 
 Computer 
 Science.\nhttp://labor.ihr.ucsc.edu/labor-and-immigration-working-group/gilbert-gonzales\nhttp://www.maxwell.syr.edu/geo/Mitchell,_Don/\nhttp://www.brooklyn.cuny.edu/web/academics/faculty/faculty_profile.jsp?faculty=34 
 (Ness)\nhttp://heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/matloff.html\n\n2:00 - 3:30 PM\n(3rd 
 floor Room A)\nPassing Through to the Territory\n By Bob Wells\nWhat would 
 have happened if Huckleberry Finn and Jim had met abolitionist John Brown? 
 On the 150th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation, this work by 
 retired Oakland Education Association member Bob Wells carries on the story 
 of Huckleberry Finn and brings to life the struggle of abolitionist John 
 Brown and what happened as he connected with Huckleberry Finn and 
 Jim.\n\n(3rd floor Room B)\nGuest Workers and Resistance to U.S. Corporate 
 Despotism \n By Immanuel Ness\nNess’s work looks at the growth of migrant 
 labor and global capitalism from India and Jamaica to the USA. Over 300 
 million migrant workers are a growing force in the world economy, including 
 a growing number who are also high tech workers. Ness looks at the 
 political crisis of our present unions who are unable to grapple with this 
 new world global economy and now are even supporting a new massive “guest 
 worker” program after initially opposing it. At the same time there is 
 growing opposition among this new migrant global 
 workforce.\nhttp://www.brooklyn.cuny.edu/web/academics/faculty/faculty_profile.jsp?faculty=34 
 (Ness)\n\n(First floor theater)\nGlobalization, Digital Films, and New 
 Directions in Documentary\n By Tom Zaniello\nTom Zaniello is the foremost 
 writer on working class films and documentaries. In his new work, Zaniello 
 discusses labor documentaries that focus on many of the global working 
 class struggles and provides a critical look at technology, immigration and 
 the world economy. The development of these global documentaries and the 
 stories they tell is critical to understand the changes in our world and 
 his report on these films is illuminating.\n\n4:00 - 5:30 PM\n(3rd floor 
 Room A)\nVirgin Soul\n By Judy Juanita\nThe political and social movements 
 of the 1960s, including the Black Panther Party, is what this novel centers 
 on. It looks at how young African American women were activated and 
 transformed by the movements of the 1960’s. Judy Juanita was a student 
 and member of the Black Student Union. She has taught English at Laney 
 College from 1993 to 2012 as a professor.\n\n(3rd floor Room B)\nThey Saved 
 the Crops - Labor, Landscape, and the Struggle over industrial farming in 
 Bracero-era California\n By Don Mitchell\nDon Mitchell, is a professor at 
 Syracuse University. He has written a basic primer to understand the 
 California Bracero Program. “The Bracero Program was the ideal business 
 recipe for cheap immigrant labor, cooked up by growers and stamped 
 Government Approved.” This work is absolutely critical to understand 
 today, “as ... ‘guest worker’ politics is a pot always on the 
 boil,” and the push for a new “guest worker” program is now embedded 
 in the new immigration “reform” 
 bill.\nhttp://www.maxwell.syr.edu/geo/Mitchell,_Don/\n\n(First floor 
 theater)\nHealthcare, Wellness Programs and Obama’s Affordable Care Act 
 (ACA) and Labor \nJournalist Steve Early and other labor panelists will 
 discuss the growing push for “wellness programs” and the affect of 
 Obama’s ACA on unions and their Taft-Hartley healthcare plans. Unions, 
 including the UFCW, IBT and others are angry that the ACA will undercut 
 their union healthcare benefits plans. This panel will look at who is 
 behind this healthcare “reform” and how it will affect working people, 
 union and non-union. The panel will include: Steve Early, labor journalist; 
 Brad Wiedemier, SEIU-UHW executive board member; Brenda Barros, SF General 
 Hospital SEIU 1021; Charlie Andrews, healthcare writer; Carl Finamore, 
 retired IAM 1781, delegate SF Labor Council.\n\nSee 
 also:\nhttp://www.laborfest.net/2013/2013Bookfair.htm\nhttp://www.laborfest.net/2013/2013schedule.htm\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/06/22/18738823.php
SUMMARY:Laborfest: LaborFest BookFair
LOCATION:Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts  - 2868 Mission St., San Francisco. 
 24th St BART.
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/06/22/18738823.php
DTSTART:20130728T170000Z
DTEND:20130729T010000Z
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