Strike paper

A strike paper, strike bulletin or strike newspaper is a news publication started by participants in a strike action.[1]

A 1983 Finnish nursing strike started a strike paper to efficiently communicate with its members.[2]

Papergirl by Melinda McCracken is a novel about a girl who distributes the strikers' newspaper during the 1919 Winnipeg general strike.[3]

Examples

References

  1. "Strike Papers". Presstime. Vol. 7. 1985. pp. 30–.
  2. Hayward, Sarah; Fee, Elizabeth (1992). "More in Sorrow Than in Anger: The British Nurses' Strike of 1988". International Journal of Health Services. 22 (3): 397–415. doi:10.2190/CKJC-UGCX-DTFN-W9AK. ISSN 0020-7314. JSTOR 45131053. PMID 1644505. S2CID 1540266.
  3. Petz, Sarah (May 5, 2019). "Daughter of late Winnipeg writer revives long lost novel on 1919 General Strike". CBC News.
  4. Berkowitz, Monroe (1990). "Review of On Strike! Capital Cities and the Wilkes-Barre Newspaper Unions". Industrial and Labor Relations Review. 43 (4): 480–481. doi:10.2307/2524137. ISSN 0019-7939. JSTOR 2524137.
  5. Wagner, Dave; Buhle, Paul (1983). "Workers' Control and the News: The Madison, Wisconsin, Press Connection". In Green, James (ed.). Workers' Struggles, Past and Present: A 'Radical America' Reader. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. pp. 379–388. doi:10.1353/book.59700. ISBN 978-1-4399-1784-8.
  6. Smith, W. Donald (1996). "The 1932 Asō Coal Strike: Korean—Japanese Solidarity and Conflict". Korean Studies. 20: 94–122. ISSN 0145-840X. JSTOR 23719604.
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