An Era of Wildcats and Sick-outs in Canada? The Continued Decline of Industrial Pluralism and the Case of Air Canada

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
An Era of Wildcats and Sick-outs in Canada? The Continued Decline of Industrial Pluralism and the Case of Air Canada
Abstract
In the winter of 2012, the Canadian federal Conservative government introduced back-to-work legislation prohibiting work stoppages at Canada’s largest airline, Air Canada. In the following weeks, wildcat strikes by baggage handlers, ground crew, and even pilots rattled the company. These disputes were preceded in 2011 by another instance of back-to-work legislation and threats of legislation against Air Canada’s customer service workers and flight attendants, respectively. In all cases, the union leadership was legally forced to police their membership and order their members to cease job actions when they erupted. This article situates the Conservative government’s coercive measures to deal with labor unrest at Air Canada within a broader anti-union context, highlighting the continued decline of industrial pluralism in Canada and questioning whether the repeated use and threat of federal back-to-work legislation will open up space for civil disobedience as a new norm in Canadian industrial relations.
Publication
Labor Studies Journal
Volume
39
Issue
2
Pages
118-139
Date
June 2014
Journal Abbr
Labor Studies Journal
Language
en
ISSN
0160-449X
Short Title
An Era of Wildcats and Sick-outs in Canada?
Accessed
5/25/21, 8:39 PM
Library Catalog
SAGE Journals
Extra
Publisher: SAGE Publications Inc
Citation
Stevens, A., & Nesbitt, D. (2014). An Era of Wildcats and Sick-outs in Canada? The Continued Decline of Industrial Pluralism and the Case of Air Canada. Labor Studies Journal, 39(2), 118–139. https://doi.org/10.1177/0160449X14531681