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A New Scale of Activism: Canadian Unions and the North American Free Trade Agreement, 1992–1999
Resource type
            
        Author/contributor
                    - Hamelin, Spencer (Author)
Title
            A New Scale of Activism: Canadian Unions and the North American Free Trade Agreement, 1992–1999
        Abstract
            This article focuses on the campaigns of national Canadian unions and other labour organizations against the North American Free Trade Agreement (nafta). Changes in the strategic orientation of these unions and labour organizations are traced from the period following the Canada–United States Free Trade Agreement and contextualized in post–Cold War trends in North American labour more broadly. These developments are viewed through the lens of scale shift and political process models of social movement theory. Though some transnational links were developed before nafta was implemented, these linkages were expanded following the agreement's passage. Additionally, these organizations took advantage of political opportunities originating from the new structures of nafta itself. Canadian unions and associated anti-free-trade coalitions worked alongside their regional counterparts to construct alternatives to neoliberalism and build consensus. Following the failure of domestic political opportunities to prevent the passage of nafta, some Canadian unions and labour organizations used emerging international political opportunities to deepen collaborations with their counterparts in countries experiencing trade liberalization.
        Publication
            Labour / Le Travail
        Volume
            80
        Pages
            157-184
        Date
            Fall 2017
        Language
            English
        ISSN
            1911-4842
        Accessed
            12/9/17, 2:00 AM
        Citation
            Hamelin, S. (2017). A New Scale of Activism: Canadian Unions and the North American Free Trade Agreement, 1992–1999. Labour / Le Travail, 80, 157–184. https://doi.org/10.1353/llt.2017.0046
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