CUNY SLU
Reinventing Solidarity
Podcast by CUNY SLU
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Episodes
Episode 69 - Talking Strikes w/the Labor Action Tracker Team 25.06.2026 39:24
How do we know where, when, and for how long strikes and other labor actions happen in the U.S.? Since 2021, the Labor Action Tracker has been the only comprehensive database of strikes and other work stoppages in the country. Researchers Johnnie Kallas, Deepa Kylasam Iyer, and Luke O'Brien join NLF Editor Chris Maisano on the latest episode of Reinventing Solidarity to talk about their project an...
Episode 68 - Truth and Reconciliation with Ana Avendaño 29.05.2026 38:43
Episode 68 - Truth and Reconciliation with Ana Avendaño by CUNY SLU
Episode 67 - How Can Workers Win? 24.04.2026 43:12
What can the UAW’s efforts to scale up new organizing efforts teach the rest of the labor movement? Former UAW chief of staff Chris Brooks shares his reflections on organizing in higher education and the auto industry with NLF Editor Chris Maisano and Editor-at-Large Micah Uetricht on the latest episode of Reinventing Solidarity.
Episode 66 - An Abundance Agenda for Workers? 25.03.2026 36:25
Can we have an "abundance agenda" that works for workers? The renowned Harvard University economist Dani Rodrik argues that we can - so long as we accept that manufacturing is no longer the path to good jobs, embrace new technologies to boost productivity in the service sector, and adopt a more pragmatic and experimental approach to policy making. Rodrik joins Chris Maisano on the latest episode o...
Episode 65 - Making Sense of the Radical Right 27.02.2026 47:03
Radical right-wing politics is commonly understood as a cry of the “left behind” - working-class voters who lost out in the transition to a post-industrial, services-based, and globalized economy. Philip Rathgeb, a political economist at the University of Edinburgh, challenges this view in How the Radical Right Has Changed Capitalism and Welfare in Europe and the USA (Oxford University Press, 2024...
Episode 64 - "The Law of Capitalism and How to Transform It" 26.01.2026 44:51
Capitalism is commonly understood as an economic system, but Columbia University legal scholar Katharina Pistor argues that its more properly understood as a kind of legal regime. Pistor joins Chris Maisano on the latest episode of the SLU podcast Reinventing Solidarity to talk about her new book, The Law of Capitalism and How to Transform It, and its practical relevance to labor organizing today.
Episode 63 - Lessons from 100 Years of Black Labor Activism 08.12.2025 53:44
At a live event at CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies, CUNY SLU Assistant Professor of Labor Studies Cameron Black moderated a lively panel discussion of Cedric de Leon’s new book, Freedom Train: Black Politics and the Story of Interracial Labor Solidarity (University of California Press, 2025). The panel also included author and activist Bill Fletcher Jr. and Tamara Lee, Associate Professor,...
Episode 62 - Introducing New Labor Forum Editor Chris Maisano 16.10.2025 41:46
At a live event at the CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies, New Labor Forum Editor-at-Large Micah Uetricht interviews the journal's new Editor Chris Maisano, who introduces himself, offers some thoughts about the current state of the labor movement, and discusses his article "Does 'Left-Conservatism' Have a Future?" from the Fall 2025 issue of New Labor Forum.
Episode 61 - Labor Against Authoritarianism 17.09.2025 37:39
In this episode of Reinventing Solidarity, we feature a keynote address from National Education Association president Becky Pringle from a conference titled "Labor and the Crisis of Democracy," hosted by the CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies and co-sponsored with the Cornell University Worker Institute. Pringle takes stock of the attacks on workers, free speech, and basic democratic rights, b...
Episode 60 - Intersectional Organizing: Building Solidarity in the Labor and LGBTQIA+ Movements 09.06.2025 55:26
This episode brings together Joanna Wuest, Brittani Murray, and Jaz Brisack to discuss how queer organizers build community within their workplaces to support civil rights and social justice movements and share strategies for building power to defend workplaces and vulnerable communities, as we witness increased attacks on the rights and safety of LGBTQIA+ people, especially transgender individual...
Episode 59 - Jaz Brisack on Union Organizing Today 05.05.2025 42:06
New Labor Forum’s Micah Uetricht speaks with labor organizer and former Starbucks barista Jaz Brisack about the Starbucks campaign, the practice of salting, and their new book Get on the Job and Organize: Standing Up for a Better Workplace and a Better World.
Episode 58 - Interrogating the Entrepreneurial Work Ethic 09.04.2025 48:13
Historian Madeleine Baker talks to New Labor Forum's Micah Uetricht about the sanctified place of the entrepreneur in American history, and why the entrepreneurial work ethic is at the core of how the Right hopes to remake workers and citizens.
Episode 57 - Can Federal Workers Beat DOGE? 27.02.2025 35:00
Episode 57 - Can Federal Workers Beat DOGE? by CUNY SLU
Episode 56 - Class Dealignment and the Two-Party System 10.02.2025 49:57
New Labor Forum editor-at-large Micah Uetricht speaks to the Center for Working-Class Politics's Jared Abbott about Democrats losing working-class voters, why it matters, and the prospects for reversing it.
Episode 55 - New Directions in Labor Politics 06.01.2025 1:03:42
Understanding what labor must do under a hostile new presidential administration requires reflection on unions’ successful political strategies in recent years, the nature of contemporary capitalism, the role of political education in labor, and much more. Bob Master moderates a recent and wide-ranging panel discussion on these issues at CUNY’s School of Labor and Urban Studies.
Episode 54 - An Interview with the UAW's Jonah Furman 06.12.2024 1:10:51
It's been a new day in the United Auto Workers since the election of Shawn Fain as president in 2023, with the union carrying out an aggressive organizing and political program that has established the UAW as a major presence in American life. New Labor Forum's Micah Uetricht spoke to Jonah Furman, a top aide to Fain, about the union's strategy, its various wins and losses among nonunion auto manu...
Episode 53 - Labor, Big Tech, and A.I.: The Big Picture 04.11.2024 1:14:32
What does the rise of artificial intelligence mean for workers and organized labor? And just what is AI, anyway? New Labor Forum editor-at-large discusses these questions and more with labor reporter Alex Press and technology reporter and editor Ed Ongweso, Jr.
Episode 52 - Free Trade, Repressed Workers 04.10.2024 1:06:09
How free was the imposition of the free trade model in the late-twentieth century? Not very, suggests political scientist Adam Dean’s research. The neoliberal trade model that has come to dominate the globe was imposed through repressive measures against the trade unions that opposed it in country after country. Dean talks to New Labor Forum’s Micah Uetricht about this history and what it means fo...
Episode 51 - The Emergency Workplace Organizing Committee 30.08.2024 41:07
Times change, in society, politics, and economics, but the labor movement rarely does. Which makes the Emergency Workplace Organizing Committee (EWOC) a rare bird in US labor. New Labor Forum editor-at-large Micah Uetricht speaks to EWOC organizer Megan Svoboda about the project's origins in the coronavirus pandemic and how it has grown to a major national organization to aid workers in any indust...
Episode 50 - Queer Working-Class Politics and the U.S. Labor Movement 14.06.2024 40:15
Why are unions essential to LGBTQ liberation? Why is union organizing that advocates for all workers essential to uplifting queer workers? And why is queer advocacy so commonsense to many of today’s unionized workers? Political scientist Joanna Wuest explores these questions and more in a conversation with New Labor Forum editor-at-large Micah Uetricht for our podcast Reinventing Solidarity.
Episode 49 - Worker-to-Worker Organizing Goes Viral 09.05.2024 45:13
As innovative new union organizing campaigns have taken off around the country in recent years, Rutgers labor scholar Eric Blanc argues that we can see the emergence of a new organizing model that has the potential to meet the moment. He calls it "worker-to-worker organizing," a concept he explored in his Winter 2024 New Labor Forum article "Worker-to-Worker Organizing Goes Viral" and in his forth...
Episode 48 - The Child Care Facilitated Enrollment Project for Working Families 02.04.2024 30:05
At a time of crushing childcare costs in New York City and around the country, the labor-backed Child Care Facilitated Enrollment Project is one bright spot for working-class families. New Labor Forum editor-at-large Micah Uetricht spoke to United Federation of Teachers vice president for Academic High Schools and chair of the New York Union Child Care Coalition Janella Hinds and Assemblyman Andre...
Episode 47 - "The 2023 UAW Strike: A Turning Point in Labor History?" 13.02.2024 50:14
The United Auto Workers achieved a real breakthrough in their 2023 strike against the Big Three automakers. For this episode, our new editor-at-large Micah Uetricht interviews longtime labor historian Nelson Lichtenstein about his piece in the Spring 2024 issue of New Labor Forum assessing the wins in the contract, the corruption scandals and subsequent new union leadership victory that led to the...
Episode 46 - "Practical Radicals: Seven Strategies to Change the World" 28.12.2023 40:51
In the work of creating a more just and sustainable world, which strategies hold the most promise for overcoming the enormous obstacles inherent in 21st century capitalism? A recent book, Practical Radicals: Seven Strategies to Change the World by Deepak Bhargava and Stephanie Luce, tackles this question head on. Based on interviews with leading activists, the authors draw vital lessons from organ...
Episode 45 - Logistics Workers Rise: UPS, Amazon, and Long-Haul Trucking 06.11.2023 41:55
In this episode we examine the recent threatened strike and massive contract victory of the Teamsters as that union took on UPS, the nation’s largest unionized private sector employer. In September 2023, Teamsters President Sean O’Brien spoke about the strike weapon and labor’s resurgence at a large public forum hosted by the School of Labor and Urban Studies. Following his talk, he engaged with a...
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