The Pandemic and the Working Class
How US Labor Navigated COVID-19
Steve Striffler editor Nick Juravich editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Illinois Press
Published:5th May '25
£108.00
Supplier delay - available to order, but may take longer than usual.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, thousands of workers lost their jobs in sectors from hospitality to transportation, while healthcare and frontline service workers faced a new world of brutal hours in unsafe and even deadly conditions. Yet, as the US economy reopened, workers experienced a rare moment of leverage as demand for labor and government support powered a surge of collective action that allowed working people to seek rights, respect, and power on the job through resignations, walkouts, strikes, and union organizing. The lessons and legacies of this upsurge in organizing continue to shape work, activism, and politics across the nation today.
Nick Juravich and Steve Striffler edit a collection that examines the effects of the pandemic on workers. Sections of the book focus on specific impacts and government efforts to restructure the economy; the dramatic effect of the pandemic on the hospitality industry; educators’ response on behalf of themselves and their students; frontline healthcare workers; and the innovative forms of labor organizing that emerged during and after COVID.
Contributors: Carlos Aramayo, Kathleen Brown, Sandrine Etienne, Ismael GarcÍa-ColÓn, Puya Gerami, Maura Hagan, Connor Harney, Devan Hawkins, Leigh Howard, Marian Moser Jones, Doris Joy, Nick Juravich, Eric Larson, Kathryn M. Meyer, Samir Sonti, Steve Striffler, Lia Warner, Andrew B. Wolf, and Jennifer Zelnick
“By covering various industries and time periods, this comprehensive collection provides us with an essential guide for exploring the significance of the pandemic to the working class.”--Jamie McCallum, author of Essential: How the Pandemic Transformed the Long Fight for Worker Justice
ISBN: 9780252046520
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 454g
328 pages
New edition