A renewal of the study of public sector unionism in Canada is long overdue. This article explains why public sector unions deserve more attention from researchers than they have received of late and proposes that studies of public sector unions would benefit from adopting a new theoretical framework that conceptualizes contemporary unions as not only labour relations institutions but also as particular kinds of working-class movement organizations within a historically-specific class formation. It also identifies two obstacles to the production of accounts of contemporary public sector unions from this perspective
This article presents a conceptual model that seeks to explain why trade union incidence in North Am...
This article, part of a symposium on the history of various areas of labor and employment law, gives...
This article examines the revitalization of a union federation’s capacity to represent young workers...
How can unions arrest membership decline in an increasingly chilly climate? Unions across Canada hav...
Academic research on public attitudes towards unions in Canadian provinces is virtually non-existent...
oai:justlabour.journals.yorku.ca:article/1This study analyzes the results of a 2010 national survey ...
Graduate student unions are beginning to attract attention in Canada and the United States. In Canad...
Over the past century unions and post-secondary educational institutions have enjoyed an uneasy rela...
Originally prepared to provide background information and analysis for a Canadian Labour Congress co...
What role the law should play in encouraging the growth of trade unions is a matter of considerable...
During the 1970's unionization among professional employees in Canada has increased and this trend h...
This article examines the unionization of local government workers in Ontario during the 1940s and 1...
This article addresses an issue arising from a comparative study of the nature of education and trai...
This article contends that there is a growing, if uneven, crisis in public sector trade unionism mas...
Cette étude vérifie la perception que les Canadiens se font du syndicalisme depuis la Deuxième Guerr...
This article presents a conceptual model that seeks to explain why trade union incidence in North Am...
This article, part of a symposium on the history of various areas of labor and employment law, gives...
This article examines the revitalization of a union federation’s capacity to represent young workers...
How can unions arrest membership decline in an increasingly chilly climate? Unions across Canada hav...
Academic research on public attitudes towards unions in Canadian provinces is virtually non-existent...
oai:justlabour.journals.yorku.ca:article/1This study analyzes the results of a 2010 national survey ...
Graduate student unions are beginning to attract attention in Canada and the United States. In Canad...
Over the past century unions and post-secondary educational institutions have enjoyed an uneasy rela...
Originally prepared to provide background information and analysis for a Canadian Labour Congress co...
What role the law should play in encouraging the growth of trade unions is a matter of considerable...
During the 1970's unionization among professional employees in Canada has increased and this trend h...
This article examines the unionization of local government workers in Ontario during the 1940s and 1...
This article addresses an issue arising from a comparative study of the nature of education and trai...
This article contends that there is a growing, if uneven, crisis in public sector trade unionism mas...
Cette étude vérifie la perception que les Canadiens se font du syndicalisme depuis la Deuxième Guerr...
This article presents a conceptual model that seeks to explain why trade union incidence in North Am...
This article, part of a symposium on the history of various areas of labor and employment law, gives...
This article examines the revitalization of a union federation’s capacity to represent young workers...