Christian Wright is an environmental and labor historian in Moab. He is a member of the Utah State Historical Society, the Western History Association, and Grand Canyon River Guides.
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"The author tells the story of the challenges faced by the United Mine Workers of America after a half-century struggle to establish the union in Utah. It is a story that is important to the state, the West, and the nation. This work is a valuable case study of the stability and vulnerability of an institution that, since its founding in 1890, has been an essential force in the emergence of modern America, but whose relevance is now in question." -Allan Kent Powell, author of The Next Time We Strike: Labor in the Eastern Utah Coal Fields and editor emeritus of the Utah Historical Quarterly "In this lively analysis, Christian Wright illuminates one facet of today's political preoccupation with the fate of America's coal miners. He explores the disintegration of industrial democracy within Utah coal in the mid- to late-twentieth century, revealing how reform spearheaded by Miners for Democracy within the UMWA faltered within an era of social and technological change." -Nancy Taniguchi, author of Dirty Deeds: Land, Violence, and the 1856 San Francisco Vigilance Committee