Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)
Identification: International, cross-industry labor organization that holds that all workers should unite as a class
Date: Founded in June, 1905
Significance: When the Industrial Workers of the World was founded, it was the only union to welcome African Americans, women, and immigrants. Active in many labor disputes and opposed to war, it has faced strong opposition from company management and the U.S. government.
The Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) emerged in 1905 in the United States as a labor union committed to organizing a wide range of unrepresented workers by using the tactics of direct workplace action. The Industrial Workers of the World, whose members are known as the “Wobblies,” took as its fundamental premise the reality of sharp and sustained class conflict in American capitalist society. IWW organizers argued for a broad-based multiethnic union to advance the interests of all wage laborers, but especially those workers not included in large craft unions. Initial organizers of the Industrial Workers of the World came from already established unions, such as the Western Federation of Miners, the United Metal Workers, the United Brewery Workers, and various socialist and labor rights groups. Wobblies defined their work within the international labor movement as well. In contrast to organizations like the American Federation of Labor (AFL), which emphasized contract negotiations and electoral politics within existing industrial and economic relations, Industrial Workers of the World political philosophy called for direct action to build working class power, with the eventual goal of ending the inequities of wage labor and shifting to decentralized worker control across the spectrum of American industry and business.
During its early decades, the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) used organizing tactics such as strikes, work slowdowns, worker education classes, music, political art, and journalism. This emphasis on cultural work and strikes has made the Industrial Workers of the World a very visible presence in American labor organizing, with organizing work in the twenty-first century focused on low-wage, skilled, and semiskilled workers.
The tactics employed by the IWW in its early decades were agitation within agricultural work, domestic service, and the mining, logging, textile, and construction industries. By refusing to focus on contract strategies, Industrial Workers of the World organizers brought workers into direct confrontational encounters with owners and managers, on terms set by the union through strikes, slowdowns, and independent journalism. Wobblies pushed the flashpoints in labor politics decidedly to the left.
The IWW also broke through racial, gender, and ethnic barriers to integrate unions around the country, to work for the rights of agricultural and migrant workers, and to propel women into national labor leadership. By prioritizing worker education, music, journalism and cultural creativity (art, cartoons, and the like) theWobblies expanded public exposure to leftist critiques within American labor relations. Committed to decentralized power, Wobblies also rejected authoritarian and centralized models for socialism or communism as strongly as they rejected the AFL focus on contract negotiations. Industrial Workers of the World activity often sparked severe reactions from government and business, including violent suppression of strikes, suppression of free speech, and imprisonment of Industrial Workers of the World organizers. These dynamics exposed American labor relations to critical public scrutiny, both domestically and internationally.
Sharon Carson
Further Reading
Buhle, Paul, and Nicole Schulman, eds. Wobblies! A Graphic History of the IndustrialWorkers of theWorld. New York: Verso, 2005.
Dubofsky, Melvyn. We Shall Be All: A History of the Industrial Workers of the World. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2000.
Kornbluh, Joyce. Rebel Voices: An IWW Anthology. Chicago: Charles H. Kerr, 1998.
See also: American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations; Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters; Debs, EugeneV.; International Ladies’ GarmentWorkers’ Union; labor history; labor strikes; John L. Lewis; Panic of 1873.