
New Books in Economic and Business History Abe Walker, "Reassembling the UAW: Insurgency, Contention, and the Struggle for Unionism in the American South" (Temple UP, 2026)
Mar 17, 2026
Abe Walker, assistant professor of sociology and author of Reassembling the UAW, studies labor organizing and the UAW’s Chattanooga campaigns. He traces the decade-long struggle to unionize Volkswagen, reviews strategic failures and the rise of insurgent rank-and-file tactics, and explains how shifts in strategy, scandals, and worker-led mobilization produced a 2024 breakthrough.
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Bad National Contracts Undermined Organizing
- The UAW's weakened appeal in the South stemmed from concessionary national contracts that created two-tier wages and temporary-worker hierarchies.
- Walker argues this shattered industrial solidarity and made the union unattractive to transplant workers.
Layered Obstacles Crippled 2014 Drive
- Chattanooga 2014 faced overlapping obstacles: a honeymoon effect, company bribes, supervisor intimidation, delayed recognition, astroturf PR, and threats to subsidies.
- These combined made the 2014 election outcome highly unfavorable before campaigning even began.
Top Down Deals Sabotaged 2014 Campaign
- UAW's 2014 strategy relied on corporate cooperation and works-council talk, sacrificing house visits and rank-and-file ties.
- Walker shows those top-down deals and secrecy alienated production workers and handed opponents an opening.

