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The Labor Wars in Cordoba, 1955–1976 : Ideology, Work, and Labor Politics in an Argentine Industrial City

Part of the Harvard Historical Studies series
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Córdoba is Argentina’s second-largest city, a university town that became the center of its automobile industry.

In the decade following the overthrow of Juan Perón’s government in 1955, the city experienced rapid industrial growth.

The arrival of IKA-Renault and Fiat fostered a particular kind of industrial development and created a new industrial worker of predominantly rural origins.

Former farm boys and small-town dwellers were thrust suddenly into the world of the modern factory and the multinational corporation. The domination of the local economy by a single industry and the prominent role played by the automobile workers’ unions brought about the greatest working-class protest in postwar Latin American history, the 1969 Cordobazo.

Following the Cordobazo, the local labor movement was one characterized by intense militancy and determined opposition to both authoritarian military governments and the Peronist trade union bureaucracy.

These labor wars have been mythologized as a Latin American equivalent to the French student strikes of May–June 1968 and the Italian “hot summer” of the same period.

Analyzing these events in the context of recent debates on Latin American working-class politics, James Brennan demonstrates that the pronounced militancy and even political radicalism of the Cordoban working class were due not only to Argentina’s changing political culture but also to the dynamic relationship between the factory and society during those years. Brennan draws on corporate archives in Argentina, France, and Italy, as well as previously unknown union archives.

Readers interested in Latin American studies, labor history, industrial relations, political science, industrial sociology, and international business will all find value in this important analysis of labor politics.

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Product Details
Harvard University Press
0674508513 / 9780674508514
Hardback
12/08/1998
United States
456 pages, 2 line illustrations, 11 tables
156 x 235 mm, 798 grams