逃离工会标签?黄金时代劳工与商业的政治动员

Running From the Union Label? Labor and Business Political Mobilization in the Golden Age

Work and Occupations · 2023
被引 1
ABS 3

中文导读

研究了1950年代工业中西部工会政治效能,发现商业团体成功将工会标签武器化,而工会需淡化身份并借助社区伙伴才能成功,揭示了工会巅峰期的脆弱性。

Abstract

This paper assesses labor's political effectiveness in the industrial Midwest at the peak of union strength during the 1950s—a time and place that should have been ripe for labor mobilization. Comparing labor and business mobilization and outcomes across key labor elections, I find that politicians and business groups were often successful in persuading industrial communities to vote against labor's interests while unions struggled to shed outsider and greedy special interest labels. To make sense of labor's mixed performance, I draw on social movement theory and the inter-related nature of union mobilization, countermovement organization, and the framing of labor issues. Labor struggled when facing a well-organized business countermovement, which effectively weaponized the union label against labor. Union success hinged in part on their ability to downplay union identity and to have other more respected community partners do much of the public-facing work, but only when facing a fractured opposition. The findings point to important vulnerabilities unions faced at their peak and suggest a more nuanced view of postwar labor relations. They also extend social movement research on framing by identifying the important role of countermovements and coalitions in shaping what movements can convey and what will resonate.

劳工关系政治动员社会运动商业政治美国政治经济