Collective Action and Labour Militancy Interrupted: Back-to-Work Legislation and the State of Permanent Exceptionalism at Air Canada

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Collective Action and Labour Militancy Interrupted: Back-to-Work Legislation and the State of Permanent Exceptionalism at Air Canada
Abstract
Using data collected from survey responses and interviews conducted in 2014, this study examines the consequences of back-to-work legislation from the perspective of customer service workers at Air Canada represented by Unifor Local 2002. By examining union attitudes, opinions of strikes, wildcat actions and back-to-work legislation deployed in 2011 and 2012, the study concludes that this type of legislation functioned to protect the interests of the employer in an ongoing process of corporate restructuring. Such ad hoc legislative measures, defined by political economists as ‘permanent exceptionalism’, further undermines the industrial pluralist regime that is the foundation of Canadian labour relations.
Publication
Economic and Industrial Democracy
Volume
41
Issue
1
Pages
6-28
Date
2016
Language
English
ISSN
0143-831X
Short Title
Collective Action and Labour Militancy Interrupted
Accessed
6/10/24, 3:40 PM
Library Catalog
SAGE Journals
Extra
Publisher: SAGE Publications Ltd
Citation
Stevens, A., & Templeton, A. (2016). Collective Action and Labour Militancy Interrupted: Back-to-Work Legislation and the State of Permanent Exceptionalism at Air Canada. Economic and Industrial Democracy, 41(1), 6–28. https://doi.org/10.1177/0143831X16682306