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‘The New Zealand Northern Drivers’ Union: Trade Union Anti-racism Work, 1937-1980’

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-08-09, 01:02 authored by Cybele LockeCybele Locke

In 1960, the Northern Drivers’ Union of New Zealand instituted its anti-racism policy. How this came about, and what it meant for union struggles in the following two decades, are the central concerns of this article. Effectively, the implementation of democratic organising principles within the Northern Drivers’ Union assisted the formation of anti-racism policy and practice. Union officials linked domestic racism with the experiences of black workers under apartheid in South Africa from 1960, which generated calls for a boycott of South Africa and local support for the Citizens’ Association for Racial Equality. Anti-apartheid sentiment in relation to South African rugby tours, which had galvanised unionists in the 1960s, became a source of division by the 1970s as attention turned to more “local” experiences of racism. In particular, this article considers how Māori rank and file, working together with Pākehā union officials such as communist Bill Andersen, extended trade union anti-racism work across the northern regions of the country, especially Auckland.

History

Preferred citation

Locke, C. (2021). ‘The New Zealand Northern Drivers’ Union: Trade Union Anti-racism Work, 1937-1980’. Labour History: a journal of labour and social history.

Journal title

Labour History: a journal of labour and social history

Publication date

2021-05-01

Publisher

Australian Society for the Study of Labour History

Publication status

Published

Contribution type

Article

ISSN

0023-6942