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by gmoke
Tim Costello was a labor activist with a world-wide network. He organized around contingent work and, most recently, environment and labor issues, specifically climate change as one of the founders of the Global Labor Strategies blog. I met him at various enviro/eco events and would see him in the food coop or walking down the street as he lived in my neighborhood. We would have short conversations from time to time and I always wished they were longer. He knew so damn much.
Tim died recently and has left a big hole in the world for his family, for his friends, and for the issues that he studied. His last briefing paper is about labor and climate change. The full paper is here [pdf alert].
Talking to Labor About Climate Change:
I disagree with the NYTimes obituary Mr. Costello was hailed by many academics and labor advocates as a bona fide worker-intellectual. A genial, mustached native of Boston, he drove fuel-delivery trucks, worked as a lobsterman, founded a group that battled against the fast-growing use of temporary workers and developed close links with labor advocates in China, Italy and Mexico. Tim wasn't a "worker-intellectual." By my definition, an intellectual is someone who never has dirt under their fingernails. Definitely not Tim. I consider him a scholar warrior, a Chinese ideal which he might have liked since he had become very involved in Chinese labor issues. His integrity, good humor, intelligence, and spirit were evident to anybody who had eyes to see. His loss is irreparable. His example is invaluable. His work goes on. Among his books are Globalization from Below, Global Village Vs. Global PIllage, and Building Bridges: The Emerging Grassroots Coalition of Labor and Community. |
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Labor and Climate Change: The Legacy of Tim Costello | 0 comments (0 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
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