Behrens, MartinHamann, KerstinHurd, Richard W.2020-11-172020-11-172004-01-017846945https://hdl.handle.net/1813/75396[Excerpt] Unions have engaged in revitalization efforts in all five country cases that form the basis of comparison of this book, though they differ in the strategies they have pursued and the level of success they have had. Some of the strategies have been promising or even successful in terms of their immediate outcomes; others are still waiting to be fully implemented; and still others have failed to live up to the original expectations. While in many countries union activists are eagerly developing strategies to turn their fate, they are also facing some doubt or even resistance by politicians and academics alike who question the need for a strong and unified representation of labour. Here, we set out to provide a conceptual framework to understand better these various efforts at revival of national union movements. The following section discusses existing analyses of union revitalization and argues that a comparative perspective is well suited to shed light on unions’ revitalization efforts. We then introduce different analytical perspectives on the role of labour in the economy, politics, and society to help identify the significance of unions in an ever more global economy. The next section outlines the parameters of crisis for unions by tracing indicators of union strength over time. We then suggest a framework for conceptualizing union revitalization as a multidimensional process and argue that revitalization has different meanings depending on the specific national context.en-USRequired Publisher Statement: © Oxford University Press. Final version published as: Behrens, M., Hamann, K., & Hurd, R. (2004). Conceptualizing labour union revitalization. In C. Frege & J. Kelly (Eds.), Varieties of unionism: Strategies for union revitalization in a globalizing economy (pp. 11-29). New York, NY: Oxford University Press. Reprinted with permission. All rights reserved.labor unionslabor movementsorganizingrevitalizationConceptualizing Labour Union Revitalizationarticle