Over the last forty years, new technology and rapid concentration of
ownership have caused fundamental changes in North American newspapers.
Newsworkers' unions have struggled to protect their members and to
reinvent themselves to keep up with the relentless pace of change in the
workplace, and recent strikes such as that of Seattle newspaper workers
highlight the ongoing challenges. This engaging and accessible book
focuses on how the Newspaper Guild--the main union for reporters and
editors--adopted a strategy of labor convergence, joining with other
media workers in the large and diverse Communications Workers of America
union. McKercher also looks at the nationalism of Canadian newsworkers
who instead joined an all-Canadian union similar to CWA and explores a
case study on an extreme form of labor convergence in Vancouver. She
concludes that while labor convergence is a work in progress, it is a
promising development for newsworkers and their unions, helping them
adjust to change and perhaps expand into new areas of the communication
sector.