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Michael McCann Book Launch Panel Hosted by Harry Bridges Center for Labor Studies

By January 22, 2021News

Join us at the upcoming panel, hosted by the Harry Bridges Center for Labor Studies, celebrating the release of the new book Union By Law: Filipino American Labor Activists, Rights Radicalism, and Racial Capitalism written by WISIR Advisory Committee member and Gordon Hirabayashi Professor for the Advancement of Citizenship Michael McCann (UW Political Science) with George Lovell (UW Political Science).

Author Michael McCann will be joined by Associate Professor and WISIR Field Director for History and Political Development Megan Ming Francis (UW Political Science) and longtime labor activists Cindy Domingo, Nemesio Domingo and Terri Mast.

This event is free and open to the public, streaming on-line via Zoom on February 11, 2021 05:00 PM.

Register to receive the Zoom Webinar link for this event here.

Starting in the early 1900s, many thousands of native Filipinos were conscripted as laborers in American West Coast agricultural fields and Alaska salmon canneries. There, they found themselves confined to exploitative low-wage jobs in racially segregated workplaces as well as subjected to vigilante violence and other forms of ethnic persecution.  In time, though, Filipino workers formed political organizations and affiliated with labor unions to represent their interests and to advance their struggles for class, race, and gender-based social justice.

Union by Law analyzes the broader social and legal history of Filipino American workers’ rights-based struggles, culminating in the devastating landmark Supreme Court ruling, Wards Cove Packing Co. v. Atonio (1989). Organized chronologically, the book begins with the US invasion of the Philippines and the imposition of colonial rule at the dawn of the twentieth century. The narrative then follows the migration of Filipino workers to the United States, where they mobilized for many decades within and against the injustices of American racial capitalist empire that the Wards Cove majority willfully ignored in rejecting their longstanding claims. This racial innocence in turn rationalized judicial reconstruction of official civil rights law in ways that significantly increased the obstacles for all workers seeking remedies for institutionalized racism and sexism. A reclamation of a long legacy of racial capitalist domination over Filipinos and other low-wage or unpaid migrant workers, Union by Law also tells a story of noble aspirational struggles for human rights over several generations and of the many ways that law was mobilized both to enforce and to challenge race, class, and gender hierarchy at work.

Order the book here.