Publication | Closed Access
The US Labor Movement: Its Development and Impact on Social Inequality and Politics
68
Citations
68
References
1991
Year
Labor ActionUs Labor MovementLabor RelationLawSocial ChangeFederal Labor RelationsIndustrial RelationLabor Process StudiesLabour StudyFederal Labor LawLaborCollective BargainingLabor MovementWorking ConditionsEconomic InequalitySocial InequalitySocial ClassLabor PracticesLabor RelationsLabor Force TrendLabor EconomicsWorkforce DevelopmentSociologyBusinessLabor UnionsLabor LawPolitical Science
The proliferation of research on the US labor movement has created opportunities for the development of theory on labor action. Such theory would account for variations in the development, structure, ideology, goals, functions, social composition, and societal impact of labor unions and, more generally, the labor movement. This review of recent sociological research focuses on two sets of enduring questions to which this research has been addressed. The first concerns the development of the U. S. labor movement—that is, its connection to industrialization; its internal organizational and ideological development; and worker predispositions to unionize and conduct strikes. The second pertains to the socioeconomic and political impact of the U.S. labor movement—i. e. its impact on worker livelihoods and life chances and social inequality, as well as its universalizing effects on the determinants of inequality; and, its impact on working class political participation and the shaping of social policy. This review concludes with suggestions for redirecting research in order to realize the growing opportunities for developing theory on labor action.
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