Organized labor in postcommunist states : from solidarity to infirmity
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Organized labor in postcommunist states : from solidarity to infirmity
(Series in Russian and East European studies)
University of Pittsburgh Press, c2004
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 237-251) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Paul Kubicek offers a comparative study of organized labor's fate in four postcommunist countries, and examines the political and economic consequences of labor's weakness. He notes that with few exceptions, trade unions have lost members and suffered from low public confidence. Unions have failed to act while changing economic policies have resulted in declining living standards and unemployment for their membership.
While some of labor's problems can be traced to legacies of the communist period, Kubicek draws upon the experience of unions in the West to argue that privatization and nascent globalization are creating new economic structures and a political playing field hostile to organized labor. He concludes that labor is likely to remain a marginalized economic and political force for the foreseeable.
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