"John A. Fliter has written the definitive book on the political and legal battles over maximum hours, minimum wages, and child labor culminating in the Fair Labor Standards Act and the Darby case upholding its constitutionality. He also provides a sobering reminder that many powerful figures would like to legalize child labor once again today." Erik Loomis, author of A History of America in Ten Strikes
"We take for granted the 4 -hour work week, the guarantee of a minimum wage and protections against child labor. John Fliter provides a detailed history and reminder of the hard fought battles to secure these fundamental labor standards through the Fair Labor Standards Act. As threats to the rights embodied in the FLSA reemerge in our own time, his book offers a timely reminder of its importance to workers and the public." David Weil, author of The Fissured Workplace: Why Work Became So Bad for So Many and What Can Be Done to Improve It
"An insightful account of one of American labor's most seminal legal decisions, this book arrives at a precipitous time, as conservatives persist in their siege of many of the very Fair Labor Standards Act (1938) protections the Darby ruling of 94 affirmed. The author, in his depiction of the long struggle between federal and state powers over workers rights, has given us a work of meticulous scholarship and lasting importance." Philip Dray, author of There is Power in a Union: The Epic Story of Labor in America
"Employment law grounded in the Fair Labor Standards Act of 938 and its constitutional adjudication in U.S. v Darby Lumber ( 94 ) transformed workplace relations and American culture in deep and extensive ways. Tracking three long, hard fought social movements 'centering on hours, wages, and child labor' John Fliter skillfully illuminates the origins of the Act, and what was at stake in the Darby decision. This book provides a crucial foundation for the conversation and struggle associated with contemporary workplace transformations, a must read for all labor scholars, workplace activists, and anyone interested in the making of the celebrated eight-hour day, the weekend, and humane working conditions." Larry W. Isaac, coauthor of article Striking News: Discursive Power of the Press as Capitalist Resource in Gilded Age Strikes
"Appearing as the remnant of New Deal-era labor standards regulation hangs precariously in the balance, this book could not be more timely. Few scholars can probe the origins, politics, and legal/constitutional history of the Fair Labor Standards Act as authoritatively as John A. Fliter. His highly readable narrative carries vitally important implications for the future of U.S. workers and their government's role in protecting them from exploitation." Joseph A. McCartin, co-author of Labor in America: A History, th edition
"Darby Lumber is a timely and engaging history of the long and ongoing struggle to secure fair wages and safe employment conditions for American workers." David S. Tanenhaus, author of The Constitutional Rights of Children: In re Gault and Juvenile Justice