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An evolutionary dynamic of trade union systems

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  • Streeck, Wolfgang
  • Visser, Jelle

Abstract

In recent years, parallel trends of organizational restructuring have become manifest among trade unions. Sharing similar experiences of stagnant membership and falling density rates, coupled with structural shifts in employment from industry to services and a growing pressure to attend to the needs of more heterogeneous constituencies under increasingly decentralized labor-management relations, trade unions must adapt their internal operation and external representation. In particular, unions seem to suffer from the same inverse fluctuation of revenue and client needs as social security systems, as the economics of union organizing require that most members, most of the time, do not call upon the union's services except for the collective protection it offers. In many countries, trade unions are now in a process of regrouping in which sectoral boundaries are becoming increasingly unimportant. Drawing on the case histories of union development in Germany and the Netherlands, the paper shows that current changes in the organizational landscape of trade unions are not based on political strategies of interest representation, grounded in visions of class unity or industrial governance, but are driven by an evolutionary dynamic of unions as service organizations which must respond to general principles of adaptive-economic rationality.

Suggested Citation

  • Streeck, Wolfgang & Visser, Jelle, 1998. "An evolutionary dynamic of trade union systems," MPIfG Discussion Paper 98/4, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies.
  • Handle: RePEc:zbw:mpifgd:p0047
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    Cited by:

    1. Kahmann, Marcus, 2005. "Mit vereinten Kräften: Ursachen, Verlauf und Konsequenzen der Gewerkschaftszusammenschlüsse von IG BCE und ver.di," Study / edition der Hans-Böckler-Stiftung, Hans-Böckler-Stiftung, Düsseldorf, volume 127, number 150.
    2. Behrens, Martin & Fichter, Michael & Frege, Carola M., 2001. "Unions in Germany: Searching to regain the initiative," WSI Working Papers 97, The Institute of Economic and Social Research (WSI), Hans Böckler Foundation.
    3. Jon Erik Dølvik, 2000. "Building regional structures: ETUC and the European Industry Federations," Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research, , vol. 6(1), pages 58-77, February.
    4. Jelle Visser, 2012. "The rise and fall of industrial unionism," Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research, , vol. 18(2), pages 129-141, May.

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