Congress of Industrial Organizations (U.S.)
59 works on record
Works

What's ahead?

Proceedings of the 15th Constitutional Convention

Report of the CIO delegation to the Soviet Union

Your civil rights

The drive against labor
Fair wages, fair taxes, union security
Official reports on the expulsion of Communist dominated organizations from the CIO
Security for the people
Industrial unionism
CIO resolutions on foreign policy
The CIO and the Negro worker
Report of the Resolutions Committee, Tenth Constitutional Convention of the Congress of Industrial Organizations, Portland, Oregon, November 22-26, 1948
Save the Wagner act
Ephemera, 1936-1954
Report on world unity
To the farmer from his customers
The CIO defense plan
Report on Congress
The CIO and labor unity
CIO national and international unions, March 18, 1953
Conspiracy against labor
Planning for democratic defense
Democracy means fair employment practices
Are you going to be drafted?
Human dignity, a legacy to labor
Resolutions of the Sixth CIO Convention
The CIO-AFL no-raiding agreement
How high is up?
B-B-H, an evil bill
Industrial unions mean unity
The road to victory
The CIO case for substantial pay increases
Procedure and preparation
5,000,000 jobs in world trade
Resolutions of the Seventh CIO Convention
CIO's victory program
The CIO and the war
CIO's tax program, tax wealth, not wages
Everybody's business
Free labor means victory
Statement from John L. Lewis, chairman of the Committee for Industrial Organization
Text of address by Walter White, Secretary, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, to CIO Convention, Portland, Oregon, November 25, 1948
The C.I.O.
Labor's economic review
Unite for victory against disruption, against disunity
Equal opportunity
Statement of Victor G. Reuther on behalf of the Congress of industrial organizations, before the Senate judiciary committee on immigration and naturalization, November 21, 1955
Report of President Philip Murray to the Sixth Constitutional Convention of the Congress of Industrial Organizations, Philadelphia, Nov. 1, 1943
"One-third of the nation"--still ill-housed
Frank Hague, individually and as Mayor of Jersey City, Daniel J. Casey, individually and as Director of public safety of Jersey City, Harry Walsh, individually and as Chief of police of Jersey City, and the Board of commissioners of Jersey City, defendants-appellants, vs. Committee for industrial organization, Steel workers organizing committee of the Committee for industrial organization, United electrical radio and machine workers of America, United rubber workers of America, William J. Carney, William J. Traynor, William P. McGinn, Samuel Macri, James P. Sweeney, Daniel J. Foley and American civil liberties union, plaintiffs-appellees
Labor laws and legislation pamphlets
So red the herring
Constitution of Congress of Industrial Organizations ... adopted at Atlantic City, New Jersey, effective November 22, 1940
Report of the CIO delegates to the World trade union conference, London, February 1945
CIO, 1935-1955
The case against "Right to work" laws
The C.I.O
Bibliography of CIO publications
Labor and education