Susan L. Marquis is Dean of the Pardee RAND Graduate School and Vice President of Innovation at the RAND Corporation. She is the author of Unconventional Warfare.
Susan Marquis tells the powerful story of an innovative human rights organization that has dramatically improved conditions for Florida farmworkers. Her portrayal of a group of heroic individuals from different cultural and educational backgrounds should resonate for readers who don't ordinarily think about labor rights issues. In addition, Marquis offers trenchant analysis of the challenges facing millions of low-wage workers in agricultural supply chains. -- James J. Brudney, Joseph Crowley Chair in Labor and Employment Law, Fordham University Law School I Am Not A Tractor! explores what today's corporate giants fear the most: democracy. Marquis tells the extraordinary story of how some of the poorest people in America overcame some of the most powerful to obtain justice. If immigrant farm workers in Florida can do it, so can other workers throughout the United State-and this fine book shows how. -- Eric Schlosser, author of<I> Fast Food Nation</I> and <I>Command and Control</I> This is a critically important book for social entrepreneurs, innovators, and change agents. Well written, deeply researched, and an uplifting read. You will not put this book down until you hit the final word. -- Paul C. Light, author of <I>A Government Ill-Executed</I>, Paulette Goddard Professor of Public Service, New York University Those who have been looking for the definitive story of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers and the origins of the country's most effective labor monitoring program, need look no farther. Susan Marquis has written a terrific account of the rise of CIW and the Fair Food Standards Council. She has asked all the right questions about the remarkable transformation they have brought about in Florida's tomato fields-including, how to expand it beyond Florida and agriculture. -- Janice Fine, Associate professor of labor studies and employment relations at Rutgers university and director of research and strategy, center for innovation in worker organization (CIWO) Rutgers University How on earth did a ragtag group of impoverished and marginalized farm workers bring true labor justice to the nation's fields, an accomplishment that President Clinton has described as `the most astonishing thing politically in the world we live in today?' Susan L. Marquis provides answers in this masterful investigation-detailed, academically rigorous, and impossible to put down. -- Barry Estabrook, author of <I>Tomatoland</I> With the publication of I Am Not a Tractor, the field now has the definitive description of what a worker-driven social responsibility initiative...looks like. * ILR Review * Describes the critical figures behind these campaigns, the challenges of monitoring workplace conditions, and the role of labor reformers in ensuring that growers uphold code-of-conduct agreements, pointing out that the agreements represent a major advance for workers. This is a moving story at a time when the capitalist class typically fights, rather than negotiates with, labor organizations. * Choice * A scholarly study of an effort by Florida farmworkers to improve working conditions by building partnerships along the supply chain. In the United States, the majority of consumers give little thought to where their food comes from. On that score alone, Marquis (Unconventional Warfare: Rebuilding U.S. Special Operation Forces, 1997), vice president of innovation for the RAND Corporation, does good service with this exploration of labor organization in the tomato fields of Florida.... A solid work of labor history that offers valuable lessons for other activists and organizers. * Kirkus Reviews *