'A masterful look at the challenges involved with organizing workers in higher education. Berry and Worthen provide excellent recommendations regarding vision and strategy, making the book valuable beyond the field of higher education'
Bill Fletcher, Jr., author of 'They're Bankrupting Us: And Twenty Other Myths about Unions' (Beacon Press, 2012)
'Academic precarity screws over teachers by stealing our access to memories of how precarious workers have risen up to win better conditions in the past. Who fought for something better? How did they define what 'better' meant? What strategy and tactics did they use to make progress? 'Power Despite Precarity' is an essential primer on these questions and more'
Alyssa Picard, Director, American Federation of Teachers' higher education division
'Empowers us to fight for the higher education and unions we believe in, uniting theory and practice to chart an inspiring path toward labor and education justice'
Mia L. McIver, Ph.D., Lecturer, UCLA, President, University Council-American Federation of Teachers
'Written from both an organizer's and historian's perspective, 'Power Despite Precarity' is essential reading for anyone working in higher education who wants to make a better world and wonders what it takes. Berry and Worthen provide a handbook on how the growing number of contingent faculty can unite in common cause. While it is about education, many of the lessons dealing with internal problems inside unions are not issues confined to the education sector (alas) and I especially enjoyed those parts'
Elaine Bernard, Fellow at the Labor and Worklife Program, Harvard Law School
'Essential for anyone concerned about higher education. It is impossible to separate the working conditions of faculty from the learning conditions of students, and Berry and Worthen explain how it is possible to transform both for the better of all'
Maria Maisto, President of New Faculty Majority, Maryland
'Power Despite Precarity' is not just a solid guide to best practices in day-to-day trade union work within higher education. It's also a rousing call for the contingent faculty movement to embrace grassroots, rather than top-down, organizing and break out of the narrow confines of collective bargaining'
Steve Early, national staff member of the Communications Workers of America