The Laboring of Communication examines the transformation of work and of
worker organizations in today's Information Society. The book focuses on
how traditional trade unions and new worker associations growing out of
social movements are coming together to address the crisis of organized
labor. It concentrates on the creative responses of the technical and
cultural workers in the mass media, telecommunications, and information
technology industries. Concentrating on political economy, labor
process, and feminist theory, it proceeds to offer several ways of
thinking about communication workers and the nature of the society in
which they work. Drawing on interviews and the documentary record, the
book offers case studies of successful and unsuccessful efforts among
both traditional and alternative worker organizations in the United
States and Canada. It concludes by addressing the thorny issue of
outsourcing, describing how global labor federations and nascent worker
organizations in the developing world are coming together to develop
creative solutions.