Skip to Content
The History Center In Tompkins County
Visit
About
Plan Your Visit
Events
Get Involved
Tours
Exhibits
Current Exhibits
Past Exhibits
Research
Archives and Library
HistoryForge
Community Partners
Support
Donate
Store
0
0
Give Today
The History Center In Tompkins County
Visit
About
Plan Your Visit
Events
Get Involved
Tours
Exhibits
Current Exhibits
Past Exhibits
Research
Archives and Library
HistoryForge
Community Partners
Support
Donate
Store
0
0
Give Today
Folder: Visit
Back
About
Plan Your Visit
Events
Get Involved
Tours
Folder: Exhibits
Back
Current Exhibits
Past Exhibits
Folder: Research
Back
Archives and Library
HistoryForge
Community Partners
Folder: Support
Back
Donate
Store
Give Today
The History Shop Unionizing the Ivory Tower: Cornell Workers' Fifteen-Year Fight for Justice and a Living Wage.
Screenshot 2025-05-29 112811.png Image 1 of
Screenshot 2025-05-29 112811.png
Screenshot 2025-05-29 112811.png

Unionizing the Ivory Tower: Cornell Workers' Fifteen-Year Fight for Justice and a Living Wage.

$26.95

Unionizing the Ivory Tower: Cornell Workers' Fifteen-Year Fight for Justice and a Living Wage

By Al Davidoff

Published by Cornell University Press. 2023.

Unionizing the Ivory Tower chronicles how a thousand low-paid custodians, cooks, and gardeners succeeded in organizing a union at Cornell University. Al Davidoff, the Cornell student leader who became a custodian and the union's first president, tells the extraordinary story of these ordinary workers with passion, sensitivity, and wit.

His memoir reveals how they took on the dominant power in the community, built a strong organization, and waged multiple strikes and campaigns for livable wages and their dignity. Their strategies and tactics were creative and feisty, founded on worker participation and ownership.

The union's commitment to fairness, equity, and economic justice also engaged these workers—mostly rural, white, and conservative—at the intersections of racism, sexism, classism, and homophobia. Davidoff's story demonstrates how a fighting union can activate today's working class to oppose antidemocratic and white supremacist forces.

Quantity:
Add To Cart

Unionizing the Ivory Tower: Cornell Workers' Fifteen-Year Fight for Justice and a Living Wage

By Al Davidoff

Published by Cornell University Press. 2023.

Unionizing the Ivory Tower chronicles how a thousand low-paid custodians, cooks, and gardeners succeeded in organizing a union at Cornell University. Al Davidoff, the Cornell student leader who became a custodian and the union's first president, tells the extraordinary story of these ordinary workers with passion, sensitivity, and wit.

His memoir reveals how they took on the dominant power in the community, built a strong organization, and waged multiple strikes and campaigns for livable wages and their dignity. Their strategies and tactics were creative and feisty, founded on worker participation and ownership.

The union's commitment to fairness, equity, and economic justice also engaged these workers—mostly rural, white, and conservative—at the intersections of racism, sexism, classism, and homophobia. Davidoff's story demonstrates how a fighting union can activate today's working class to oppose antidemocratic and white supremacist forces.

Unionizing the Ivory Tower: Cornell Workers' Fifteen-Year Fight for Justice and a Living Wage

By Al Davidoff

Published by Cornell University Press. 2023.

Unionizing the Ivory Tower chronicles how a thousand low-paid custodians, cooks, and gardeners succeeded in organizing a union at Cornell University. Al Davidoff, the Cornell student leader who became a custodian and the union's first president, tells the extraordinary story of these ordinary workers with passion, sensitivity, and wit.

His memoir reveals how they took on the dominant power in the community, built a strong organization, and waged multiple strikes and campaigns for livable wages and their dignity. Their strategies and tactics were creative and feisty, founded on worker participation and ownership.

The union's commitment to fairness, equity, and economic justice also engaged these workers—mostly rural, white, and conservative—at the intersections of racism, sexism, classism, and homophobia. Davidoff's story demonstrates how a fighting union can activate today's working class to oppose antidemocratic and white supremacist forces.

The History Center in Tompkins County

OPEN Wednesday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m.

Located in Ithaca Commons 110 N Tioga St, Ithaca NY 14850

community@thehistorycenter.net

Tompkins County is on the traditional, ancestral, and contemporary lands of the Gayogo̱hó꞉nǫˀ Nation, part of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy. Read more…

Subscribe

Sign up with your email address to receive news and updates.

We respect your privacy.

Thank you!