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Citizenship Rights, Domestic Work, and the Fair Labor Standards Act
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 February 2012
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- Copyright © Donald Critchlow and Cambridge University Press 2012
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1. “Domestics at Session Ask Gains,” New York Times, 10 October 1972, 47; “Keynote Address: by Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm,” Newsletter, 1972, n.p., Records of the National Committee on Household Employment, MAMC 075 S05 B01, National Archives for Black Women’s History, Mary McLeod Bethune Council House, Washington, D.C. (hereafter NCHE Papers); Jeannette Smythe, “Hard Act to Follow,” Washington Post, 19 July 1971, B1.
2. For more on connections between the civil rights movement and the domestic worker rights movement, see Nadasen, Premilla, “Power, Intimacy, and Contestation: Dorothy Bolden and Domestic Worker Organizing in Atlanta in the 1960s,” in Intimate Labors: Cultures, Technologies, and the Politics of Care, ed. Eileen, Boris and Rhacel, Parreñas (Stanford, 2010).Google ScholarChristiansen, Lars, “The Making of a Civil Rights Union: The National Domestic Workers Union of America (Ph.D. diss., Florida State University, 1999).Google ScholarBeck, Elizabeth, “The National Domestic Workers Union and the War on Poverty,” Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare 28, no. 4 (December 2001): 195–211.Google Scholar
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21. “The Householder,” Newsletter by Household Management, Inc., Issue no. 7, 1969, p. 1, NCHE Papers, 003 S01 B06 F24.
22. Statement of Mrs. Edith Barksdale Sloan, executive director, National Committee on Household Employment, Hearings Before the General Subcommittee on Labor, Committee on Education and Labor, House of Representatives, 15 March 1973, 3, NCHE Papers, 003 S01 B11 F04.
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28. Ibid.
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44. “Mrs. Chisholm Led Fight for Domestics’ Base Pay,” New York Times, 21 June 1973, 45.
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53. Shelton, a graduate of Howard University, who worked previously with the National Council of Negro Women and the National Urban League, replaced Edith Barksdale-Sloan as executive director of NCHE in 1976. NCHE, “Household Employment: Employer’s Market—Worker’s Nightmare,” Press Release, 29 May 1976, p. 30, NCHE Papers, 003, S03, B03, F01.
54. NCHE, “Program Priorities for 1976 and 1977, Adopted and Ratified at the Fourth National Leadership Convention of NCHE, 28–30 May 1976, St. Louis, Missouri, Legal and Illegal Immigrants,” p. 1, NCHE Papers, 003, S03, B03, F01.
55. NCHE, “Program Priorities for 1976 and 1977, Adopted and Ratified at the Fourth National Leadership Convention of NCHE, 28–30 May 1976, St. Louis, Missouri, Legal and Illegal Immigrants,” p. 3, NCHE Papers, 003, S03, B03, F01.
56. Eileen Boris and Jennifer Klein, “‘We Were the Invisible Workforce’: Unionizing Home Care,” in The Sex of Class: Women Transforming American Labor, ed. Dorothy Sue Cobble (Ithaca, 2007), 177–93.
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