2003
DOI: 10.1017/s0003055403000820
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Acting When Elected Officials Won't: Federal Courts and Civil Rights Enforcement in U.S. Labor Unions, 1935–85

Abstract: U sing the racial integration of national labor unions as a case study, I find that courts played an important and meaningfully autonomous role in integrating unions while elected officials largely failed to act. Courts, unlike elected officials, offered civil rights groups relatively easy access to the legal agenda. In response to thousands of cases in federal courts, judges rewrote key civil rights statutes, oversaw the implementation of their rulings, and used attorneys' fees and damage awards to impose sig… Show more

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Cited by 96 publications
(53 citation statements)
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References 87 publications
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“…In some successful struggles, lawsuits have failed to generate appellate decisions directly authorizing many of the new rights and remedies that activists sought. The ability to win at least some small advances on related issues and to win a hearing in court for major claims often poses enough actual costs (bad publicity, legal fees) and potential risks (of judicially imposed policies) to pressure opponents into making significant concessions (Frymer 2003). Moreover, the very framing of issues in terms of rights can transform debates and add weight to claims.…”
Section: Generating Responsive Actionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In some successful struggles, lawsuits have failed to generate appellate decisions directly authorizing many of the new rights and remedies that activists sought. The ability to win at least some small advances on related issues and to win a hearing in court for major claims often poses enough actual costs (bad publicity, legal fees) and potential risks (of judicially imposed policies) to pressure opponents into making significant concessions (Frymer 2003). Moreover, the very framing of issues in terms of rights can transform debates and add weight to claims.…”
Section: Generating Responsive Actionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…DuBois (1935/1998) told how White workers in organized trades opposed the abolitionist movement for fear that free Black workers would underbid and compete for jobs held by White workers. After the Civil War and up through the Civil Rights movement, Jim Crow trade unions abounded (Frymer, 2003). After the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, changes in the procedures for litigating made possible a wave of lawsuits that charged discrimination.…”
Section: Minority Exclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Initially, the focus of litigation was on voting rights and integration of schools, but then it turned to employment, and the building trades were in the crosshairs. Between 1965 and1985, the civil rights litigation against building trades unions was so relentless that some went bankrupt (Frymer, 2003). In Chicago, in the mid 1980s, some of the major building trades apprenticeship programs were placed under consent decrees as a result of civil rights lawsuits.…”
Section: Minority Exclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The seminal works in this literature include Whittington (2007Whittington ( ,2005, Gillman (2006Gillman ( , 2002, Pickerill & Clayton (2004), Clayton & May (1999), Lovell (2003, Frymer (2003Frymer ( , 2007, McMahon (2004), Hirschi (2004), Ginsburg (2003, Sweet (2000), Graber (1993), Lasser (1988, and Dahl (1957).…”
Section: The Counterma]oritarian Difficulty Reviledmentioning
confidence: 99%