Home > Journals > Michigan Law Review > MLR > Volume 35 > Issue 8 (1937)
Abstract
The country finds itself infected with a strike rash. Conditions are now like those which previously have resulted in this state of affairs. The midtide of recovery from a depression low has brought rising prices, freer spending, business increase, and speeded up production, but only incomplete relief to labor from depression hours and wages and the later speed-up. Such traditional causes of strikes have been coupled with a new demand for labor recognition. Moreover, a strike now has a much greater chance of success than it would have had at any time within the past several years--a potent stimulant to labor unrest, as every businessman knows. And the chance of success has been augmented by the development of labor's as yet most effective weapon, the sit-down strike. This weapon and its legal status are to be the topic of the present comment.
Recommended Citation
Charles C. Spangenberg,
LABOR LAW -- LEGAL STATUS OF SIT-DOWN STRIKE -- LEGAL AND EQUITABLE REMEDIES,
35
Mich. L. Rev.
1330
(1937).
Available at:
https://repository.law.umich.edu/mlr/vol35/iss8/8