Union commitment and activism in Britain and the United States: Searching for synthesis and synergy for renewal Journal
Material type: TextPublication details: British Journal of Industrial Relations 2012Description: Journal articleISSN: 1467-8543Subject(s): Labour unions | Commitment (Psychology) | ActivismDDC classification: Journals Online access: Open e-book (Ruskin students only) Summary: We propose a fuller synthesis between two relatively disjointed literatures to create synergy. Union commitment research has a long tradition and a relatively rigorous orientation grounded in industrial psychology. Recently, it has been eclipsed by emerging research on union renewal, and specifically that on union organizing. Renewal research has largely ignored union commitment research even though union renewal literature stresses the importance of activism, and this concept is strongly linked to commitment. A critical synthesis of these literatures yields progress in terms of addressing key qualitative and quantitative aspects of the contemporary crisis of labour unionism. A tentative framework is constructed that stipulates the main components and variables, and offers guidance for future research.Item type | Current library | Home library | Class number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item reservations | |
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Article | Electronic publication | Electronic publication | Available |
<p>British Journal of Industrial Relations, Vol. 50 no. 2 (Sep 2012), p. 189-213</p> <p>Available in the library. See journal shelves.</p> <p>Available online. </p>
We propose a fuller synthesis between two relatively disjointed literatures to create synergy. Union commitment research has a long tradition and a relatively rigorous orientation grounded in industrial psychology. Recently, it has been eclipsed by emerging research on union renewal, and specifically that on union organizing. Renewal research has largely ignored union commitment research even though union renewal literature stresses the importance of activism, and this concept is strongly linked to commitment. A critical synthesis of these literatures yields progress in terms of addressing key qualitative and quantitative aspects of the contemporary crisis of labour unionism. A tentative framework is constructed that stipulates the main components and variables, and offers guidance for future research.
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