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Article (print)
Confederation of trade unions of Yugoslavia and international trade union cooperation (1964)
in: Yugoslav trade unions: organ of the Confederation of Trade Unions of Yugoslavia ; publ. monthly in English, Russian, French and Spanish, p. 32-38
ISSN: 0044-135X
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Book (electronic)
The trade unions: what are they? (1970)
in: The Commonwealth and international library
The Trade Unions-What Are They? is a primer of the trade union movement in Britain and examines the convolutions of industrial negotiations as well as the intricacies that have to be unraveled by those handling the problems-whether of the application of the Incomes and Prices policy or of restrictive practices. This book traces the history of British trade unions and presents the biographies of five great trade union leaders of the past. Four famous trade-union cases are also highlighted, along with some important events and statistics. This monograph is comprised of 13 chapters and begins wit.
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Article (electronic)
Democracy in trade unions, democracy through trade unions? (2018)
in: Economic and industrial democracy, Volume 40, Issue 1, p. 91-110
ISSN: 1461-7099
Since the Webbs published Industrial Democracy at the end of the nineteenth century, the principle that workers have a legitimate voice in decision-making in the world of work – in some versions through trade unions, in others at least formally through separate representative structures – has become widely accepted in most West European countries. There is now a vast literature on the strengths and weaknesses of such mechanisms, and we review briefly some of the key interpretations of the rise (and fall) of policies and structures for workplace and board-level representation. We also discuss the mainly failed attempts to establish broader processes of economic democracy, which the eclipse of nationally specific mechanisms of class compromise makes again a salient demand. Economic globalization also highlights the need for transnational mechanisms to achieve worker voice (or more radically, control) in the dynamics of capital–labour relations. We therefore examine the role of trade unions in coordinating pressure for a countervailing force at European and global levels, and in the construction of (emergent?) supranational industrial relations. However, many would argue that unions cannot win legitimacy as a democratizing force unless manifestly democratic internally. Therefore we revisit debates on and dilemmas of democracy within trade unions, and examine recent initiatives to enhance democratization.
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Article (electronic)
Trade Unions (1969)
in: The international & comparative law quarterly: ICLQ, Volume 18, Issue 4, p. 1022-1022
ISSN: 1471-6895
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