Historically trade unions were in the forefront of social reform, campaigning against child labour, against the 12‐hour day and for free public education and universal suffrage. But with their achievement of great power and influence in the modern societies they have been less sensitive to the present day exploited and oppressed — to women and guestworkers and all those foreign in colour and language, in customs, sex and tastes. To be sure these groups are often unfamiliar with unions, and reluctant to join them even if invited because of the fear of employer reprisal and their weak position in the labour market. Characterised as they have been by transiency, dependency and divided loyalties, the unions long wished them away or accepted them if they behaved like native men, that is to say in an understandable way and with acceptable rationality. Although the similarities between the problems of women and foreign workers or workers of colour in the labour markets of the industrialised countries is an intriguing study, we shall here look specifically at the case of women, recognising the while that their problems are not unique and their oppression not unprecedented.
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1 February 1981
This article was originally published in
Equal Opportunities International
Review Article|
February 01 1981
THE MOST DIFFICULT REVOLUTION: WOMEN AND TRADE UNIONS Available to Purchase
Alice H. Cook
Alice H. Cook
Professor Emerita, New York State School of Industrial and Labor Relations, Cornell University
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7093
Print ISSN: 0261-0159
© MCB UP Limited
1981
Equal Opportunities International (1981) 1 (2): 9–11.
Citation
Cook AH (1981), "THE MOST DIFFICULT REVOLUTION: WOMEN AND TRADE UNIONS". Equal Opportunities International, Vol. 1 No. 2 pp. 9–11, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb010346
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