- Date
2007
- Authors
Maria L. Ontiveros
- Abstract
When thousands of immigrants and immigrant rights supporters took the streets on May 1, 2006, it felt like the coming of age of a social movement akin to the civil rights movement of the 1950s-60s or the labor movement of the 1930s-40s. Just as sanitation workers in Memphis, supported by Martin Luther King, Jr., carried signs proclaiming "I Am a Man" to support their fight for labor, civil, and human rights, immigrant rights groups have also invoked a range of moral justifications. Immigrant rights groups speak about human rights, workers' rights, citizenship rights, and civil rights. Immigrants, especially immigrant workers and their families, might as well draw on the language of the Thirteenth Amendment.
- Journal title
New Labor Forum
- Volume
16
- Issue
2
- Page numbers
26-33
- Publisher
Sage Publications, Inc.
- File Attachments
- Links
- Economic sectors
General relevance - all sectors
- Content types
Policy analysis, Current Policy, and Past policies
- Target groups
Public awareness and NGOs/community groups/solidarity networks
- Geographical focuses
United States
- Spheres of activity
History and Law
- Languages
English