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104:. Throughout its history, the LID has called itself a proponent of the labor movement. The group saw this movement as a progressive force that is misunderstood by intellectuals. The goal of this is to break down these perceived boundaries and to promote "education for increasing democracy in our economic, political, and cultural life"
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movement in Poland since 1980, providing financial, moral and political support. Furthermore, in 1986, the LID coordinated efforts on a campaign to protest the crackdown on Polish universities by the government. The LID, in conjunction with Poland Watch Center and
Committee in Support of Solidarity,
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In the spring of 1921, the ISS held a vote regarding the name and goals of their organization. Harry
Laidler announced: "the members of the Intercollegiate Socialist Society had declared themselves in favor of the change in name and purpose." In November, the organization assumed its new name and
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Today's affiliates are mostly anti-communists and focus their energy on democracy building in places such as
Eastern Europe, Africa, and Central America, while paying very little attention to its domestic program.
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enlarged its scope to addressing society at large. They also presented their new guiding principle: "Education for a New Social Order Based on
Production for Public Use and Not for Private Profit."
242:(NED), a U.S. government-funded organization that sponsors anticommunist,"democracy-building" projects around the globe. In a three-year period, CSS received over a million dollars from NED.
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Guide to League for
Industrial Democracy. Pamphlets, 1922-1978. 5266. Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives, Martin P. Catherwood Library, Cornell University.
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In its early years, the LID addressed societal problems such as poverty, child labor, work conditions, and poor housing conditions, under the leadership of notable activists:
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The proceedings of the 70th annual conference of the League for
Industrial Democracy held in New York City on May 2 and 3, 1975.
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332:"PLAN TO WIN STUDENTS TO 'NEW SOCIAL ORDER'; League for Industrial Democracy Speaker Calls Agricultural 'Bloc' Communistic"
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of the 1930s led to an increase in radical student activism. The collegiate section was reorganized into an autonomous
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Thirty-five years of educational pioneering; L.I.D. celebrates past achievements and asks "Where do we go from here?"
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with the stated purpose of throwing "light on the world-wide movement of industrial democracy known as socialism."
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By 1965, SDS had separated from the LID, but it ended national activity in 1969, after it had been taken over by
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100:. During the Great Depression of the 1930s, the LID organized radio stations and broadcasts centered around the
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suggestion that the labor movement was "too quiescent, to be counted with enthusiasm" as an agent for change,
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in 1921. Members decided to change its name to reflect a more inclusive and more organizational perspective.
238:. The Brussels-based Committee in Support of Solidarity (CSS) is a group heavily supported by the
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Brick and Clay Record: A Semi-monthly Record of the World's
Progress in Clayworking..., Volume 68
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and dislike of formal offices, seen as potentially undemocratic and lacking accountability, and
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AIFLD in
Central America: Agents as Organizers (Albuquerque, NM: The Resource Center, 1987)
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Machinists' Monthly
Journal. Official Organ of the International Association of Machinists
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8:
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1932 poster for League for
Industrial Democracy, designed by Anita Willcox during the
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456:. Online documents at Early American Marxism site. Retrieved August 23, 2006.
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Encyclopedia of Associations, Section 9, Public Affairs Organizations, 1989.
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155:. LID activity on campus remained somewhat dormant until 1946, when the
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372:, edited by Molly Cochran. Cambridge University Press, 2010. p. xvii.
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96:. It became the base for leftwing intellectuals, otherwise known as
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failure to explicitly exclude communists from its vision of the
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Encyclopedia of U.S. Labor and Working-class History, Volume 1
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The L.I.D.: fifty years of democratic education, 1905-1955.
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The League for Industrial Democracy: A Documentary History.
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and began to take a more radical direction. In July 1962
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The challenge of change and conflict in American society
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groups, some of which advocated and committed political
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Student wings of political parties in the United States
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In three volumes. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1980.
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On January 1, 1960, the SLID changed its name to the
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427:Bernard K. Johnpoll and Mark R. Yerburgh (eds.),
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295:"I.S.S. Gives Way to New League for Democracy".
454:Intercollegiate Socialist Society (1905 - 1921)
147:(SLID) in 1933. This merged with the Communist
528:Political advocacy groups in the United States
498:Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Archives
135:with struggles of workers and poor in America
245:The League is a membership organization.
229:The LID has been actively supporting the
523:1905 establishments in the United States
468:Forty years of education, the task ahead
395:The Sixties: Years of Hope, Days of Rage
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494:League for Industrial Democracy Records
157:Student League for Industrial Democracy
145:Student League for Industrial Democracy
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151:in 1935 to create the popular front
139:Its campus presence waned until the
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111:was elected President of the LID.
47:The I.S.S. was founded in 1905 by
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169:Students for a Democratic Society
163:Students for a Democratic Society
43:Intercollegiate Socialist Society
37:Intercollegiate Socialist Society
26:Intercollegiate Socialist Society
370:The Cambridge Companion to Dewey
240:National Endowment for Democracy
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107:In 1939, the philosopher
200:participatory democracy
149:National Student League
153:American Student Union
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391:Gitlin, Todd (1993).
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320:. 1926. p. 852.
301:. November 19, 1921.
191:, in particular its
189:Port Huron Statement
86:Charles P. Steinmetz
399:. Bantam. pp.
159:was reconstituted.
82:Robert Morss Lovett
434:Kirkpatrick Sale,
338:. January 1, 1922.
278:The New York Times
175:, then chair, and
173:Michael Harrington
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119:Student affiliates
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236:Solidarnosc
187:over their
76:Early years
67:Name change
61:Jack London
507:Categories
249:References
231:Solidarity
225:Activities
185:Alan Haber
181:Tom Hayden
133:solidarity
131:, showing
109:John Dewey
98:Muckrakers
41:See also:
32:Background
219:terrorism
207:New Left
177:Tom Kahn
102:New Deal
422:Sources
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403:–409.
351:, 1922
215:Maoist
92:, and
59:, and
436:SDS.
405:ISBN
183:and
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20:(
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