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The Right to Strike: A Radical View

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  • GOUREVITCH, ALEX

Abstract

Workers face a common dilemma when exercising their right to strike. For the worst-off workers to go on strike with some reasonable chance of success, they must use coercive strike tactics like mass pickets and sit-downs. These tactics violate some basic liberties, such as contract, association, and private property, and the laws that protect those liberties. Which has priority, the right to strike or the basic liberties strikers might violate? The answer depends on why the right to strike is justified. In contrast to liberal and social democratic arguments, on the radical view defended here, the right to strike is a right to resist oppression. This oppression is partly a product of the legal protection of basic economic liberties, which explains why the right to strike has priority over these liberties. The radical view thus best explains why workers may use some coercive, even lawbreaking, strike tactics.

Suggested Citation

  • Gourevitch, Alex, 2018. "The Right to Strike: A Radical View," American Political Science Review, Cambridge University Press, vol. 112(4), pages 905-917, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:apsrev:v:112:y:2018:i:04:p:905-917_00
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    Cited by:

    1. Caleb Bernacchio, 2023. "Business and the Ethics of Recognition," Journal of Business Ethics, Springer, vol. 185(1), pages 1-16, June.
    2. Louette, Antoine, 2022. "The market ideology conception of fetishism: an interpretation and defence," LSE Research Online Documents on Economics 117171, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library.
    3. Giorgos Gouzoulis, 2023. "What do indebted employees do? Financialisation and the decline of industrial action," Industrial Relations Journal, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 54(1), pages 71-94, January.
    4. Alexander Hertel-Fernandez & William Kimball & Thomas Kochan, 2022. "What Forms of Representation Do American Workers Want? Implications for Theory, Policy, and Practice," ILR Review, Cornell University, ILR School, vol. 75(2), pages 267-294, March.

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