Mapping Care Project: The History of Black Nurses in ChicagoMain MenuHistorical timelineA brief historical timeline of black nursingMapping CareSchools of NursingNursing in the Armed ForcesNursing Beyond the HospitalFighting Healthcare & Racial InjusticesBlack Nurses TodayThe Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley Black Nurses in Chicago Oral History CollectionTeaching CarePhysical ExhibitBibliographyFor more information on the history of black nursing and a complete list of cited works see the following scholarly and archival sourcesAcknowledgmentsThank you for your participation and supportEditorial Team"Who We Are"Contact UsMidwest Nursing History Research Centere5433416c6e0eadc5db699a0e191fdb04e454262
Lingel, Clark-Parsons, and Branciforte, 1150
12023-04-14T20:33:41+00:00Leora Mincerc7fb2a48912f3577c64c28e4e6663a94d04c8c8411plain2023-04-14T20:33:41+00:00Leora Mincerc7fb2a48912f3577c64c28e4e6663a94d04c8c84Jessa Lingel, Rosemary Clark-Parsons, and Kim Branciforte. “More Than Handmaids: Nursing, Labor Activism and Feminism.” Gender, work, and organization 29, no. 4 (2022): 1150, doi.org/10.1111/gwao.12816.
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12023-04-11T18:47:53+00:00Quote about rates of nurse unionization3plain2023-04-14T20:33:48+00:00"Roughly 20% of US nurses are unionized, compared to approximately 12% of the general working population."1