Copper Crucible is a powerful analysis of labour-management relations in the American mining industry during the 1980's. It is also a powerful exposition of the influence individuals play in those relationships. By examining the dispute from a number of perspectives, Rosenblum has ensured that influences such as gender and ethnicity are not obscured in the overall analysis of the events.
--Harry Knowles "Journal of Industrial Relations"
Rosenblum writes with the verve of a good journalist and the empirical precision of a fine scholar. He is as deft at sketching brief portraits of key executives, union officials, and rank-and-file strikers as he is at untangling the legal skein in which the miners got fatally ensnared.
--Michael Kazin "New York Times Book Review"
The word "crucible" refers to cauldrons for melting ore, to fundamental tests of belief or faith, and to historical moments marked
by a confluence of intense intellectual, economic, and political dynamics. Each of these meanings is central to Jonathan
Rosenblum's narrative account of the 1983 copper miners' strike against the Phelps-Dodge Corporation; a strike that broke the
miners' union, left its members stunned and jobless, and -- along with Reagan's firing of the Air Traffic Controllers -- helped set
the tone for a decade or more of union busting in the United States.
COPPER CRUCIBLE is difficult to summarize because of its narrative complexity and lack of a central thesis or argument. In
telling the story of the strike, lawyer-journalist Rosenblum takes the reader back and forth among several main venues. The
beautifully written work first pulls us into the context of the 1983 strike by describing the desert, the families, and the passions
involved in the local struggle. The center of conflict involves the nearly contiguous Arizona towns of Clifton and Morenci; the
former was the seat of the union, the latter, the company town and the site of the huge open pit mine from which the
copper-rich ore was drawn. With the context thus set, COPPER CRUCIBLE turns to a history of the copper industry, the
Phelps Dodge corporation, and the labor struggles in Arizona's copper mines; here the author shows how the earlier eras of
armed conflict and tense cooperation between labor and management set the stage for the standoff of 1983.
But if history set the stage, Rosenblum makes it clear that Phelps Dodge executives wrote most of the script. He shows how
Phelps Dodge leaders set their sights on breaking the union, obtained strategic advice from faculty members at the Wharton
School, and moved into battle with almost unflinching adherence to a strategy of union destruction. In a nutshell, the plan was to
demand major concessions -- including the death of longstanding cost-of-living-adjustment (COLA) provisions -- which would
force an inevitable strike. As the strike endured in the face of a unmoving corporate position, Phelps Dodge would hire,
protect, and promote permanent replacement workers, who would in turn decertify the union.
On the other side, we see a hometown and largely Chicano union local approaching a normal strike in the three year contract
cycle with no apparent sense that a grander war was in the making. As the Phelps Dodge strategy is deployed at the negotiation
table and the Morenci mine, the strikers go through a slow and dreadful recognition that this was no normal negotiations strike
-- replacement workers came and they were permanent. Under the leadership of the United Steelworkers of America, the
strike went forward without concession and as months turned into years, the permanent replacement workers finally fulfilled the
Phelps Dodge plan by decertifying the union itself. In the process, children were shot in their beds, the National Guard was
mobilized, citizens were teargassed, homes were lost, and a longstanding union town was all but destroyed. Through it all,
Rosenblum tells the story with passion and
Page 152 follows:
sensitivity and makes no bones about this being a tale of good and evil -- a David and Goliath story in which Goliath wins. In
some ways, COPPER CRUCIBLE is an odd book for inclusion in THE LAW AND POLITICS BOOK REVIEW. It has no
explicit reference to any academic work on law, the politics of law, or law and labor relations. It has no explicit theory of any
kind; there are no discussions of the politics of rights, of the politics of social movements, of the ideology of law, of legal
hegemony, of the political economy of law, or of any of the other things academics might toy with. If there is an implicit theory
of power and law, it is a combination of simple pluralism (in which individuals and groups go to battle using whatever resources
they can mobilize) and legal realism (in which the law is whatever the often corrupt judges and NLRB administrators say it is).
But this absence of explicit theory does not leave this narrative wanting for relevance to the field. We see a history of the legal
politics surrounding organizing efforts in the Arizona copper mines (which includes a young Felix Frankfurter mediating an early
Phelps Dodge labor conflict in Arizona and then ruling against the company's anti-union tactics in Phelps Dodge v. Labor Board
(1941)). We see how the unions' faith in a pre-Reagan framing of labor law pushed them toward tactics that failed in the new
environment. We see the conspiring between the corporation, local police, local officials and the state police in a successful
effort to use the coercive powers of law against the unions. And we see the union able to turn some aspects of labor law into
concessions from the corporation. In short, we see many of the things that a more academic treatment would include, absent
the extensive analysis and footnoting.
Because it is compelling reading (truly a page turner) and chock full of anecdotes and vignettes regarding the multi-faceted
influence of law in political and economic struggle, COPPER CRUCIBLE could be an excellent addition to courses related to
law and politics. The role it could play is that of "raw data" for the course -- an empirical narrative of an intense and
multi-faceted moment of struggle in which law plays a central role. As a reading that does not push its own explicit theories of
law or "law and . . ." issues, the book would promote a dialogue in which a class would move toward its own theories and
explanations. In this sense, COPPER CRUCIBLE, could begin a course by encouraging creative analysis of the subject, or
conclude a course by inviting students to apply different academic perspectives to the Arizona case. As a moving and
passionately told story of human struggle and defeat, the book would be sure to generate compelling discussions of law's role in
our world.