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Proud to share this Wikipedia article on Sit-down strikes, which I rewrote and expanded as part of @WikiEducation's Scholars & Scientists program. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sitdown_strike
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In terms of tactics, sit-down strikes defy simple categorization. As I've written before: "Were the sit-downs a triumph of “violent” or “nonviolent” tactics? Answer: Both." woborders.blog/2012/02/13/debating-tactics-remember-to-ask-what-works/
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Workers carried out 583 sit-down strikes, occupying their factories and workshops and dime stores, between 1936 when Akron rubber workers scaled up the practice and February 1939 when the US Supreme Court ruled that firing sit-down strikers was definitively legal.
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On-the-ground reporting and theorizing by Louis Adamic made this experience especially vivid, and I was only able to access Adamic's _My America_ due to @internetarchive's amazing online book library.
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Through the Scholars & Scientists program, Wiki Education works to connect Wikipedia with subject-matter experts who can improve core articles and create new ones. wikiedu.org/blog/category/wikipedia-professional-development/testimonials-wiki-scholars/-
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Upcoming Scholars and Scientists courses offered by Wiki Education are listed here: wikiedu.org/learn/







