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  5. Advantages of Backwardness: Lessons for Social Europe from the American Labour Movement

Advantages of Backwardness: Lessons for Social Europe from the American Labour Movement

File(s)
Turner1076_Advantages_of_Backwardness.pdf (1.25 MB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/75190
Collections
Faculty Publications - International and Comparative Labor
ILR Articles and Chapters
The Worker Institute Publications
Author
Turner, Lowell
Abstract

[Excerpt] In the crisis of declining union influence, the United States has played a vanguard role. The weakness of labour in the U.S. has opened the door to the neoliberal policies developed here and then imposed on the global economy. More recent efforts to revitalise the labour movement aim, among other things, to reverse such policies. In suffering union decline and grappling for new strategies, we have what Alexander Gerschenkron once called the ‘advantages of backwardness’. Ironically, European unions and social democrats can perhaps derive lessons not only from our failures but also from our efforts to turn the tide.

Date Issued
2007-04-01
Keywords
labor movement
•
decline
•
social democracy
•
Europe
•
unions
Rights
Required Publisher Statement: © Social Europe, Ltd. Reprinted with permission. All rights reserved
Type
article

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