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American Unions in Comparative Perspective
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Graham K. Wilson
Published/Copyright:
May 15, 2012
American unions have been stronger and more politically active than a simple “exceptionalist” perspective would suggest. However, the combination of economic trends evident in other advanced democracies combined with an unsympathetic legal environment has made the decline of private sector unions in the US particularly severe. The growth of unions in the public sector compensates only partially for this decline and creates additional problems for the cause of organized labor in general.
Published Online: 2012-5-15
©2012 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Introduction
- Special Issue: Labor in American Politics
- Article
- A Brief Ascendency: American Labor After 1945
- The Most Powerful Political Force in the Country
- Do Unions Still Matter in U.S. Elections? Assessing Labor's Political Power and Significance
- Teachers Unions and American Education Reform: The Politics of Blocking
- The Education Iron Triangle
- Solidarities and Restrictions: Labor and Immigration Policy in the United States
- Public Sector Unions Need the Private Sector or Why the Wisconsin Protests Were Not Labor's Lazarus Moment
- The Return of Judicial Repression: What Has Happened to the Strike?
- "Broken Windows," Vulnerable Workers, and the Future of Worker Representation
- American Unions in Comparative Perspective
- Commentary
- Political Science as a Vocation: An Appreciation of the Life and the Work of James Q. Wilson
- Review
- Weakness and Wisdom: A Review of In My Time and Known and Unknown
- The Trouble With Teachers Unions: Review of Special Interest