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Changing Nature: Union Discourse and the Fermi Atomic Power Plant

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 March 2014

Jacquelyn Southern*
Affiliation:
Trinity College

Abstract

The first known grassroots protest against nuclear power was organized by industrial unions: the United Auto Workers, the International Union of Electrical Workers, and the United Papermakers and Paperworkers. In Power Reactor, a landmark case begun in 1956 and pursued all the way to the Supreme Court (where it was lost in 1961), these unions tried to prevent construction of the Enrico Fermi Atomic Power Plant, a fast breeder reactor, outside Detroit. However, their action has been interpreted as not truly environmental at all, but rather as merely a smokescreen for their opposition to commercially developed atomic power; at that time they were identified with support for public power, which was under assault by the Republican party. Attending to union discourses of nature reveals the case to have marked a pioneering turn from a conservation to environmental discourse of nature.

Type
Environment and Labor
Copyright
Copyright © International Labor and Working-Class History, Inc. 2014 

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References

NOTES

1. This essay is based on a chapter of my dissertation, “Labor, Environmentalism, and the Public Interest: The United Auto Workers in the Quiet Decade.” I am grateful to my advisor, Susan Hanson, for her encouragement and support and appreciate the help of my committee members, Robert Mitchell, Dianne Rocheleau, Patricia Greenfield, and the late Julie Graham. I also appreciate the close reading and suggestions of two anonymous reviewers. Above all, many thanks are due my husband, Christopher Couch.

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