The Korean labour movement has been broadly understood as one of the most militant trade union movements in the world. To be sure, the radical unionism in Korea has been rapidly developing since the emergence of democratic trade union movement in the 1970s, changing the nature of the relations between capital and labour to a great extent. However, despite its fame, it also faces many challenges from the accelerated restructuring of capitalist relations. This article examines the dynamics of the development of the relations between the state, capital and labour after the economic crisis in Korea in 1997. By doing so, it attempts to identify the basis of the challenge to the further development of the Korean labour movement, in the context of...
In the literature in English, the prevailing view on Korean unions during the economic developmental...
Since the Asian economic crisis in the late 1990s, Korea has developing one of the most unequal labo...
Labour markets across industrialised countries are under considerable pressure with governments impl...
The aim of this article is to examine changes in Korean labour relations before and after the econom...
We examine recent challenges regarding membership, coverage and organisation that are facing the Kor...
Labour markets across industrialised countries are under considerable pressure with governments impl...
This article aims to analyse the nature, forms and effectiveness of the unions’ response to neo-libe...
On Saturday 14 February 1998, South Korea passed new labour legislation which gives employers the ri...
The democratisation of Korea during the past decade has been accompanied by mass worker protest from...
Since the mid-1980s, industrial relations researchers (Kim Byung-whan, 1988; Park Yong-ki, 1993, pp....
On Saturday 14 February 1998, South Korea passed new labour legislation which gives employers the ri...
This article aims to examine the recomposition of capitalist work in South Korea. Based on Marx’s un...
[Extract] For the Republic of Korea (hereafter Korea) the decade since 1987 has seen a process of de...
This article examines the processes of labor market restructuring and welfare reform in South Korea ...
The role of organized labour as expression of dissent or social resistance to neoliberal economic gl...
In the literature in English, the prevailing view on Korean unions during the economic developmental...
Since the Asian economic crisis in the late 1990s, Korea has developing one of the most unequal labo...
Labour markets across industrialised countries are under considerable pressure with governments impl...
The aim of this article is to examine changes in Korean labour relations before and after the econom...
We examine recent challenges regarding membership, coverage and organisation that are facing the Kor...
Labour markets across industrialised countries are under considerable pressure with governments impl...
This article aims to analyse the nature, forms and effectiveness of the unions’ response to neo-libe...
On Saturday 14 February 1998, South Korea passed new labour legislation which gives employers the ri...
The democratisation of Korea during the past decade has been accompanied by mass worker protest from...
Since the mid-1980s, industrial relations researchers (Kim Byung-whan, 1988; Park Yong-ki, 1993, pp....
On Saturday 14 February 1998, South Korea passed new labour legislation which gives employers the ri...
This article aims to examine the recomposition of capitalist work in South Korea. Based on Marx’s un...
[Extract] For the Republic of Korea (hereafter Korea) the decade since 1987 has seen a process of de...
This article examines the processes of labor market restructuring and welfare reform in South Korea ...
The role of organized labour as expression of dissent or social resistance to neoliberal economic gl...
In the literature in English, the prevailing view on Korean unions during the economic developmental...
Since the Asian economic crisis in the late 1990s, Korea has developing one of the most unequal labo...
Labour markets across industrialised countries are under considerable pressure with governments impl...