Recasting labor studies in a long-term and global framework, the book draws on a major new database on world labor unrest to show how local labor movements have been related to world-scale political, economic, and social processes since the late nineteenth century.
Through an in-depth empirical analysis of select global industries, the book demonstrates how the main locations of labor unrest have shifted from country to country together with shifts in the geographical location of production. It shows how the main sites of labor unrest have shifted over time together with the rise or decline of new leading sectors of capitalist development and demonstrates that labor movements have been deeply embedded (as both cause and effect) in world political dynamics. Over the history of the modern labor movement, the book isolates what is truly novel about the contemporary global crisis of labor movements. Arguing against the view that this is a terminal crisis, the book concludes by exploring the likely forms that emergent labor movements will take in the twenty-first century.
Comments
I can't recommend this book
I can't recommend this book highly enough.
Uh, is there some way to turn
Uh, is there some way to turn the pages in the document around? Otherwise it is of no use and in my opinion, this article should be deleted.
In adobe reader you can just
In adobe reader you can just rotate clockwise. If anyone has nitro or something and can rotate it permanently and re-upload, that'd be great though.
Hieronymous wrote: I can't
Hieronymous
ditto!
Steven. wrote: Hieronymous
Steven.
There's a book new out which I really want to read called 'Workers, State and Development in Brazil: Powers of Labour, Chains of Value'. Unfortunately it's from an academic publisher and costs a fortune, so I'll have to find it in a library. It takes a very similar approach to Silver, focussing on the structural and associational power of workers as a factor in development. The author is in the SWP, but takes an approach critical of both market-led (neoliberal) orthodoxy and state-led (Ha-Joon Chang, Robert Wade etc) heterodoxy in favour of a class struggle perspective on development. There's a short article summarising the book here.
Selwyn
Steven. wrote: Hieronymous
Steven.
Ditto!
Joseph Kay wrote: In adobe
Joseph Kay
I've done this now. Should be in the moderation que.
Cheers Felix!
Cheers Felix!
better quality here:
better quality here: