Gerald Markowitz, Distinguished Professor of History, John Jay College, CUNY: "Blue-Green Coalitions provides important insights that a wide variety of environmental coalitions and labor groups across the country can learn from. Brian Mayer provides a sophisticated analysis of labor/environmental coalitions and the reasons they succeed or fail, adapt to new political and social and economic conditions or not, and grow or stagnate. Throughout, Mayer shows that concerns about health can be the nexus around which cooperation can be encouraged and achieved. This is an important book for activists and scholars alike." Charles Levenstein: "Brian Mayer has written a thoughtful, important book about the problems and possibilities for a broad-based public health movement, although that is not quite how he characterizes his work. Blue-Green Coalitions builds on the growing literature about links between trade unions and other worker organizations with the environmental movement. Through three case studies of grassroots coalitions, Professor Mayer develops an argument that 'health' is an effective cross-movement framing strategy. The political lessons he derives are important for progressive organizers, for those concerned with environmental justice, and for those hoping for a rejuvenated labor movement.
This is an intelligent and complex book, well worth careful reading." Sandra Steingraber, author, Living Downstream: An Ecologist Looks at Cancer and the Environment, written with the assistance of UAW workers.: "Chemical adulteration of our air, food, and water begins in somebody's workplace. As an ecologist who grew up in a union town, I have longed for exactly this book: a clear-headed account of the complex relationship between labor and environmentalism that is also a roadmap toward a grand, transformative collaboration." Alan H. McGowan, Environment, May-June 2009: "Thoughtful environmentalists and community activists have long expressed concern about the lack of meaningful collaboration between the labor and environmental movements. Brian Mayer has produced a noteworthy book focusing on this important connection in three successful coalitions of labor unions, environmentalists, and community activists. Based on an extensive literature review and a large number of interviews with coalition participants, Mayer concludes that the use of 'bridge-brokers,' people who have legitimacy in several parts of the coalition, is critical to success.
One question calling for more research is whether issues other than health can bring environmentalists and labor unions together. Blue-Green Coalitions gives important data and analysis to help answer this and other questions. It is worth a careful read.".