This paper examines the relationship between union leaders and rank-and-file members in internal discipline. Focusing on Rockhampton and employing Hyman's concept ofpower over and power for, the work argues that union leaders were neither omnipotent nor tyrannical in dispensing discipline and did so to maintain the solidarity and reputation on which rested union power over employers. Moreover, democratic processes of the union and the broader social and legislative contexts legitimated their authority
The establishment of mass trade unions in the 19th Century made the working class a force to be reck...
The National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT), which represents the majority of m...
During the postwar period, internal tensions plagued the Australian labour movement. Central to thes...
"Research of a wide range of primary sources informs this work, including hitherto unstudied local u...
This thesis examines the nature of power and control in trade unions. Two theoretical themes are dev...
This thesis examines trade union workplace organisation, industrial relations and the nature of powe...
The internal government of trade unions has been, and continues to be, a subject of special interest...
Peak union bodies, organizations formed by trade unions acting collectively, have been part of the u...
Abstract: Peak union bodies, organizations formed by trade unions acting collectively, have been par...
This paper celebrates some of the considerable strengths of Richard Hyman’s 1970s/early 1980s analys...
In a survey of 2500 workplace union delegates in eight unions we examined the power of workers at th...
This online QHA article examines the nature and activities of Rockhampton trade unionism to the 1950...
This thesis examines continuity and change and the role of trade unions in state industrial relation...
Critics of the progressive decline in membership in Australian unions attribute the predicament to a...
Job Committees, like shop committees in other industries, emerged in Broken Hill during the height o...
The establishment of mass trade unions in the 19th Century made the working class a force to be reck...
The National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT), which represents the majority of m...
During the postwar period, internal tensions plagued the Australian labour movement. Central to thes...
"Research of a wide range of primary sources informs this work, including hitherto unstudied local u...
This thesis examines the nature of power and control in trade unions. Two theoretical themes are dev...
This thesis examines trade union workplace organisation, industrial relations and the nature of powe...
The internal government of trade unions has been, and continues to be, a subject of special interest...
Peak union bodies, organizations formed by trade unions acting collectively, have been part of the u...
Abstract: Peak union bodies, organizations formed by trade unions acting collectively, have been par...
This paper celebrates some of the considerable strengths of Richard Hyman’s 1970s/early 1980s analys...
In a survey of 2500 workplace union delegates in eight unions we examined the power of workers at th...
This online QHA article examines the nature and activities of Rockhampton trade unionism to the 1950...
This thesis examines continuity and change and the role of trade unions in state industrial relation...
Critics of the progressive decline in membership in Australian unions attribute the predicament to a...
Job Committees, like shop committees in other industries, emerged in Broken Hill during the height o...
The establishment of mass trade unions in the 19th Century made the working class a force to be reck...
The National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT), which represents the majority of m...
During the postwar period, internal tensions plagued the Australian labour movement. Central to thes...