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International unionism's competitive edge: FIFPro and the European treaty

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
International unionism's competitive edge: FIFPro and the European treaty
Abstract
Globalization and neo-liberalism have been associated with a decline in unions. In seeking to respond to these problems, unions could cooperate internationally. The orthodoxy among industrial relations scholars is that the European Treaty is antithetical to international unionism because of various provisions which promote competition. The experience of the International Federation of Professional Footballers' Associations (FIFPro) contradicts this orthodoxy. In August 2001, FIFPro entered into a framework collective bargaining agreement with Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) on a new set of rules to govern the worldwide employment of professional footballers. Football's transfer and compensation system violated competitive provisions, in particular the freedom of movement of workers, contained in the European Treaty. Following the 1995 decision of the European Court of Justice in Bosman, and strategic interventions by the European Commission, FIFA sought an accommodation with FIFPro, to protect its new employment rules from further legal attack.
Publication
Relations Industrielles
Volume
58
Issue
1
Pages
85-108
Date
Winter 2003
Language
English
ISSN
0034379X
Short Title
International unionism's competitive edge
Accessed
3/10/15, 1:56 AM
Library Catalog
ProQuest
Rights
Copyright Universite Laval - Departement des Relations Industrielles Winter 2003
Citation
Dabscheck, B. (2003). International unionism’s competitive edge: FIFPro and the European treaty. Relations Industrielles, 58(1), 85–108. http://www.erudit.org/revue/ri/2003/v58/n1/index.html