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The Politics of Union Decline: The Contingent Determinants of Union Recognition Elections and Victories

机译:工会衰落的政治:工会承认选举和胜利的决定性因素

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摘要

Despite the close political regulation of union recognition disputes, sociologists have paid little attention to recent political determinants of success in these contests. A state-centered political-opportunity approach suggests that if conservative political officials can reduce the number of union recognition elections, union organization will be blocked. Partly because many labor scholars claim there was a postwar departure in labor movement fortunes, we attempt to detect and model a contingent break in the relationship between Republican control of the presidency and these elections using interactive specifications. Our findings show that shortly after the conservative, anti-union Reagan administration took office, recognition elections, and union victories in these elections, fell sharply. With macroeconomic and other determinants held constant, other political conditions with explanatory power include congressional oversight committee ideology and conservative appointments to the key regulatory agency. Our findings support political accounts and also suggest that unions' failures to organize new workplaces were sustained by subsequent conservative administrations. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
机译:尽管对工会承认纠纷的政治规定很严格,但是社会学家很少关注最近在这些竞赛中取得成功的政治决定因素。以国家为中心的政治机会方法表明,如果保守派政治官员可以减少工会承认选举的次数,工会组织将受到阻碍。部分原因是许多劳工学者声称战后劳工运动运势发生了变化,我们试图通过互动的方式来发现并模拟共和党对总统职位的控制与这些选举之间的偶然断裂。我们的研究结果表明,保守派,反工会的里根政府上台后不久,承认选举和这些选举中的工会胜利急剧下降。在宏观经济和其他决定因素保持不变的情况下,具有解释权的其他政治条件包括国会监督委员会的意识形态和对关键管理机构的保守任命。我们的发现不仅支持政治观点,而且还暗示,后来的保守派政府维持了工会未能组建新的工作场所。 [出版物摘要]

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  • 来源
    《American Sociological Review》 |2009年第5期|p.842-864|共23页
  • 作者

    Daniel Tope David Jacobs;

  • 作者单位

    Daniel TopeFlorida State UniversityDavid JacobsThe Ohio State UniversityDirect correspondence to David Jacobs, Department of Sociology, 238 Townshend Hall, 1885 Neil Avenue Mall, Columbus, OH 43210-1222 (jacobs.184@osu.edu). We thank James Brudney, Marc Dixon, Bob Kaufman, Steve Lopez, Andrew Martin, and our colleagues in the sociology department at Ohio State for their valuable comments. We are grateful to Stephen Messner and the ASR referees for their careful reviews and thoughtful advice. All data used in this analysis can be found in an Online Supplement on the ASR Web site: http://www2.asanet.oig/journals/asr/2009/toc07 1 .html. This research was partially supported by the National Science Foundation (grant no. 05263 1 5).Daniel Tope is assistant professor of sociology at Florida State University. He studies politics, work, and labor movements. He recently published several papers on racial politics (with David Jacobs). His most recent research has appeared in the American Journal of Sociology, Work and Occupations, and Social Science Research.David Jacobs is professor of sociology and (by courtesy) political science at Ohio State. He uses a political economy approach to study issues in political sociology and outcomes in the criminal justice system. A study of racial politics recently appeared in the American Journal of Sociology while publications on political, racial, and economic explanations for the death penalty have appeared in this journal in the last several years. In addition to these interests, he continues to investigate the politics of labor relations.;

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