1st Edition

Changing Prospects for Trade Unionism

Edited By Peter Fairbrother, Gerard Griffin Copyright 2002
    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    Trade union movements in many countries face uncertain futures. After three decades of extensive economic restructuring at both national and international levels, often accompanied by major legislative reforms, the way forward for unions is unclear. Throughout the 1980s and into the 1990s, in most developed economies, union membership declined massively and union leaders and their members lost their former prominence and their place in the polity. Will trade unions be able to re-establish their past salience in the bargaining arena and in the polity? Or, given the uncertainties of internationalized economies and states, will the first decade of this new century see further declines in union strength and power? This book examines these and related questions by exploring the background, current roles and prospects of trade unions in six English-speaking countries.

    Chapter 1 Introduction: Trade Unions Facing the Future, Peter Fairbrother, Gerard Griffin; Chapter 2 Unions in Australia: Struggling to Survive, Gerard Griffin, Stuart Svensen; Chapter 3 Unions in Britain: Towards a New Unionism?, Peter Fairbrother; Chapter 4 Unions in Canada: Strategic Renewal, Strategic Conundrums, Gregor Murray; Chapter 5 Irish Unions: Testing the Limits of Social Part nership, William K. Roche, Jacqueline Ashmore; Chapter 6 Unions in New Zealand: What the Law Giveth…, Raymond Harbridge, Aaron Crawford, Kevin Hince; Chapter 7 American Unionism at the Start of the Twenty-first Century: Going Back to the Future?, Paul Jarley; Chapter 8 Conclusion: The State of the Unions, Gerard Griffin, Peter Fairbrother;

    Biography

    Peter Fairbrother, Gerard Griffin