1st Edition

Reigniting the Labor Movement Restoring means to ends in a democratic Labor Movement

By Gerald Friedman Copyright 2008
    216 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    224 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    A century of union growth ended in the 1980s. Since then, declining union membership has undermined the Labor Movement’s achievements throughout the advanced capitalist world. As unions have lost membership, declining economic clout and political leverage has left them as weak props upholding wages and programs for social justice. Since the earliest days of the labor movement, activists have debated the appropriate strategy, the mix of revolutionary and reformist goals and the proper relationship between labor unions and broader social and political movements. So long as the labor movement was growing, moving from gain to gain, debates over strategy could remain abstract, safely confined to academic quarters. Decline and impending failure, however, have now made these urgent debates.

    Written in a readable style, this book uses information from sixteen countries including the UK, US, Germany and France to chart the fortunes of the labor movement over recent years. The author, based at one of the top centres for heterodox economics, examines the current debates over strategy and suggests ways of reigniting its fortunes.

    1. The Rise of the Labor Movement2. Dimensions of Decline3. Explaining Growth to Explain Decline4. Explaining Growth Spurts5. Why did Growth Stop?6. Growth Dialectics7. Can Growth be Restarted?

    Biography

    Gerald Friedman