Is Industrial Unrest Reviving in Canada? Strike Duration in the Early Twenty-First Century: Is Industrial Unrest Reviving in Canada?
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Brym, Robert (Author)
- Bauer, Louise Birdsell (Author)
- McIvor, Mitch (Author)
Title
Is Industrial Unrest Reviving in Canada? Strike Duration in the Early Twenty-First Century: Is Industrial Unrest Reviving in Canada?
Abstract
Canadian data on strike frequency, duration, and volume imply that the strike is withering away. Some research also suggests that strike duration is countercyclical. However, the early twenty‐first century was anomalous from the viewpoint of these expectations. After 2001, mean strike duration increased and was not countercyclical. This paper explains the anomaly by arguing that employers are seeking to scale back the wage gains of previous decades in the face of mounting public debt and the whip of an increasingly unfettered market. These conditions apparently motivate some workers to endure protracted work stoppages, irrespective of the phase of the business cycle, in an effort to protect their rights.
Publication
Canadian Review of Sociology/Revue canadienne de sociologie
Volume
50
Issue
2
Pages
227-238
Date
2013
Language
English
ISSN
17556171
Short Title
Is Industrial Unrest Reviving in Canada?
Accessed
8/28/18, 7:39 PM
Citation
Brym, R., Bauer, L. B., & McIvor, M. (2013). Is Industrial Unrest Reviving in Canada? Strike Duration in the Early Twenty-First Century: Is Industrial Unrest Reviving in Canada? Canadian Review of Sociology/Revue Canadienne de Sociologie, 50(2), 227–238. https://doi.org/10.1111/cars.12013
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