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E-raamat: Vegas at Odds

(University of Hawaii at Manoa)
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For historians and general readers, Kraft (history, U. of Hawaii at Manoa) draws from interviews, personal and published accounts, and public records to detail the labor relations in hotels and casinos in Las Vegas between 1960 and 1985. He discusses how changes in laws and corporations affected service workers and their unions, and how they responded to the changes in the ownership and management of casinos, including successful and failed organizing drives, struggles over pay and equal rights, and worker grievances and arbitration. He explores their work experiences, the occupational hierarchies and institutional bases of the industry, and the relationship between labor and management. Annotation ©2010 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

The stories of the shadowy networks and wealthy people who bankrolled and sustained Las Vegas's continuous reinvention are well documented in works of scholarship, journalism, and popular culture. Yet no one has studied closely and over a long period of time the dynamics of the workforce -- the casino and hotel workers and their relations with the companies they work for and occasionally strike against. James P. Kraft here explores the rise and changing fortunes of organized and unorganized labor as Las Vegas evolved from a small, somewhat seedy desert oasis into the glitzy tourist destination that it is today.

Drawing on scores of interviews, personal and published accounts, and public records, Kraft brings to life the largely behind-the-scenes battles over control of Sin City workplaces between 1960 and 1985. He examines successful and failed organizing drives, struggles over pay and equal rights, and worker grievances and arbitration to show how the resort industry's evolution affected hotel and casino workers. From changes in the political and economic climate to large-scale strikes, backroom negotiations, and individual worker-supervisor confrontations, Kraft explains how Vegas's overwhelmingly service-oriented economy works -- and doesn't work -- for the people and companies who cater to the city's pleasure-seeking visitors.

American historians and anyone interested in the history of labor or Las Vegas will find this account highly original, insightful, and even-handed.

Arvustused

This work is a welcome addition to the field of labor relations and labor history... Highly recommended. Choice 2010 This book would appeal to anyone interested in the history of Las Vegas, labor relations, organized labor, or knowing more about the worker struggles that took place behind the neon lights. -- Amy Butler Monthly Labor Review 2011

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1(8)
The Rise of Corporate Resorts
9(24)
Working in Las Vegas
33(20)
The First Work Stoppages
53(20)
The Struggle for the Casinos
73(23)
Workplace Incidents
96(21)
Fighting for Equal Rights
117(22)
The Spirit of '76
139(20)
Management Digs In, 1982-1984
159(21)
The Strike of 1984-1985
180(20)
Afterword 200(9)
Notes 209(48)
Essay on Sources 257(8)
Index 265
James P. Kraft is an associate professor of history at the University of Hawaii at Manoa and the author of Stage to Studio: Musicians and the Sound Revolution, 1890-1950, also published by Johns Hopkins.