Trade unions in Poland have not built the stable and long–term relations with political parties as are observed in Western democracies. By analysing the historical and symbolic background of the transformation to a democratic civil society and free market economy, political preferences of working class, trade union membership rates, and public opinion polls, we argue that, in case of Poland, the initial links between political parties and trade unions weakened over time. Polish trade unions never had a chance to become a long–term intermediary between society and political parties, making the Polish case study a double exception from the traditional models
With the declaration of martial law in December 1981 and the formal banning of Solidarity in October...
Trade union organising has been one of the central strategies of trade union revitalisation in Centr...
The paradox of Poland is quite straightforward. The workers, intellectuals and activists who formed ...
Trade unions in Poland have not built the stable and long-term relations with political parties as a...
This book fills a gap in the existing literature on how parties and party systems are developing in ...
The article looks at the evolution and institutional characteristics of Polish trade unions after 19...
The article looks at the evolution and institutional characteristics of Polish trade unions after 19...
CLASS CONFLICT IN STATE SOCIALISM? THE CASE OF POLAND. COMMUNIST PARTY AND TRADE UNIONS 1981-89. Was...
This article reassesses recent debates on labour weakness in Central and Eastern Europe after the en...
This article reassesses recent debates on labour weakness in Central and Eastern Europe after the en...
Contrary to predictions of continued weakness of the union movement in post-socialist countries of C...
This article seeks to relate hypotheses about how party structure and organization will develop in p...
The paper looks at the evolution of the institutions of industrial democracy, which would be changin...
The article describes the fractions and trends that functioned in the Polish United Workers’ Party i...
Trade unions are not merely economic (or ‘industrial relations’) actors: they are necessarily protag...
With the declaration of martial law in December 1981 and the formal banning of Solidarity in October...
Trade union organising has been one of the central strategies of trade union revitalisation in Centr...
The paradox of Poland is quite straightforward. The workers, intellectuals and activists who formed ...
Trade unions in Poland have not built the stable and long-term relations with political parties as a...
This book fills a gap in the existing literature on how parties and party systems are developing in ...
The article looks at the evolution and institutional characteristics of Polish trade unions after 19...
The article looks at the evolution and institutional characteristics of Polish trade unions after 19...
CLASS CONFLICT IN STATE SOCIALISM? THE CASE OF POLAND. COMMUNIST PARTY AND TRADE UNIONS 1981-89. Was...
This article reassesses recent debates on labour weakness in Central and Eastern Europe after the en...
This article reassesses recent debates on labour weakness in Central and Eastern Europe after the en...
Contrary to predictions of continued weakness of the union movement in post-socialist countries of C...
This article seeks to relate hypotheses about how party structure and organization will develop in p...
The paper looks at the evolution of the institutions of industrial democracy, which would be changin...
The article describes the fractions and trends that functioned in the Polish United Workers’ Party i...
Trade unions are not merely economic (or ‘industrial relations’) actors: they are necessarily protag...
With the declaration of martial law in December 1981 and the formal banning of Solidarity in October...
Trade union organising has been one of the central strategies of trade union revitalisation in Centr...
The paradox of Poland is quite straightforward. The workers, intellectuals and activists who formed ...