This article identifies the origins of the rise of the logistics industry to highlight the powerful structural position that this endows on the industry and its workers. I begin by analyzing an often-neglected aspect of globalization by describing the logistics, or goods movement industry, and identifying the role that the "logistics revolution" plays within the contemporary capitalist system. Then, synthesizing insights from global, economic, and labor sociology, I argue that the structural "brokerage" position of logistics workers in the global economy offers them key advantages on which labor and political movements might capitalize in struggles for economic justice and worker rights. I examine empirical research regarding labor organizing within logistics to determine if workers leverage this powerful position into concrete gains. Finally, I argue that more attention needs to be paid to how logistics workers recognize, articulate, and utilize their potentially powerful position in globalization flows.Future research should endeavor to understand how this can be achieved among wide groups of logistics workers to achieve the most success in labor and political movements.