![How Many of These Are Anti-Union Practices? A US Perspective.](/assets/artwork/1x1-42817eea7ade52607a760cbee00d1495.gif)
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How Many of These Are Anti-Union Practices? A US Perspective.
Labour History: A Journal of Labour and Social History 2009, Nov, 97
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Publisher Description
Until fairly recently Australian labour history and academic industrial relations (the two constituting almost a single field) focused almost exclusively on workers, unions, and the operation of arbitral tribunals. It was assumed that management's role was uniformly reactive and negative and therefore not worth studying. The recent broadening of the fields to include managers and management strategies represents a healthy development and a realistic recognition that today it is management which often has the upper hand. Only recently have Australian scholars become interested in deunionisation and this suggests an important difference between our two countries since union decline has been a major subject of scholarly interest in the United States (US) for many years. The present symposium, with four very different cases, raises some interesting questions, especially as to what we mean by 'anti-union'. Do we approach this question from the perspective of unions or of management? Are anti-union strategies those which are designed with the intent of weakening unions or are they those which have the effect of doing so? 'Intent' is difficult to prove or even define, as any lawyer will tell you. As for 'effect', management strategies designed to weaken unions may backfire and actually strengthen them. On the other hand, those designed for other purposes, for example to facilitate recruitment of skilled workers in a tight labour market, may eliminate causes of worker dissatisfaction and so make them more resistant to unionisation.