"to promote sound human relationships in industry by consultation, fact studies and publicity"
Headquarters
289 Fourth Avenue
Location
New York, USA
The Bureau of Industrial Research was a New York City-based labor research organization.[1]
History
In 1920, the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) created the Bureau of Industrial Research to address such issues, in part due to the influence of the technocratic ideas of Howard Scott. In 1921, a series of articles by or about the Bureau appeared in the Industrial Pioneer.[2]
Description
The group described itself as an organization "to promote sound human relationships in industry by consultation, fact studies and publicity." Its Manhattan offices had a library on current industrial relations. It offered to supply data "at moderate cost" to interested parties, whether individuals, corporations, labor organizations, or the press.[1]
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Hapgood, Powers (1922). In Non-Union Mines: The Diary of a Coal Digger in Central Pennsylvania, August–September, 1921. Bureau of Industrial Research.