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5 - The KCIR in National Public Life

Divided Reception in a Stalemated Era

from Part II - The KCIR in the World

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 July 2025

Ben Merriman
Affiliation:
University of Kansas
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Summary

There was strong national political interest in the KCIR, which established specialized courts as one of a handful of possible labor policy designs for the United States. The KCIR itself came to be regarded as the key test of the model. Owing in part to Allen’s remarkable talents as a publicist, the KCIR was regularly covered in national media. Labor and business publications were guarded or overtly hostile, but the KCIR was given serious coverage in magazines of progressive opinion, and friendly and extensive coverage in major newspapers like The New York Times. By the time of the 1920 Republican National Convention, a firm majority of notable Republicans favored using the KCIR model in at least some industries. In 1921 and 1922, President Harding called upon Congress to create a federal industrial court system. However, the factionalized Republican Congress and the fractious Harding Administration were unable to pursue any coherent model of labor policy reform. Most state legislatures introduced bills modelled on the KCIR; leaders in several states were eager to try the model, but opted to await the resolution of legal questions.

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Chapter
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The Kansas Court of Industrial Relations
Interwar America's Dangerous Experiment in Social Control
, pp. 121 - 146
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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