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Labor unions in the United States

Labor unions represent United States workers in many industries recognized under US labor law since the 1935 enactment of the National Labor Relations Act. Their activity today centers on collective bargaining over wages, benefits, and working conditions for their membership, and on representing their members in disputes with management over violations of contract provisions. Larger trade unions also typically engage in lobbying activities and electioneering at the state and federal level.

Labor unions in the United States
Hotel union workers strike with the slogan "One job should be enough"
National organization(s)AFL–CIO, SOC, IWW
Regulatory authorityUnited States Department of Labor
National Labor Relations Board
Primary legislationNational Labor Relations Act
Taft–Hartley Act
Total union membership14.3 million (2022)[1]
Percentage of workforce unionized10.1% (2022)
International Labour Organization
United States is a member of the ILO
Convention ratification
Freedom of AssociationNot ratified
Right to OrganiseNot ratified

Most unions in the United States are aligned with one of two larger umbrella organizations: the AFL–CIO created in 1955, and the Change to Win Federation (current Strategic Organizing Center) (SOC) which split from the American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial Organisations (AFL–CIO) in 2005. Both advocate policies and legislation on behalf of workers in the United States and Canada, and take an active role in politics. The AFL–CIO is especially concerned with global trade issues.

The percentage of workers belonging to a union (or total labor union "density") varies by country. In 2022 it was 10.1% in the United States, compared to 20.1% in 1983.[2][3] There were 14.3 million members in the U.S. in 2022, down from 17.7 million in 1983.[2][3] Union membership in the private sector has fallen to 6.0%, one fifth that of public sector workers, at 33.1% (2022).[2][3] From a global perspective, in 2016 the US had the fifth lowest trade union density of the 36 OECD member nations.[4][5]

In the 21st century, the most prominent unions are among public sector employees such as city employees, government workers, teachers and police. Members of unions are disproportionately older, male, and residents of the Northeast, the Midwest, and California.[6] Union workers average 10-30% higher pay than non-union in the United States after controlling for individual, job, and labor market characteristics.[7]

Although much smaller compared to their peak membership in the 1950s, American unions remain a political factor, both through mobilization of their own memberships and through coalitions with like-minded activist organizations around issues such as immigrant rights, environmental protections, trade policy, health care, and living wage campaigns.[8] Of special concern are efforts by cities and states to reduce the pension obligations owed to unionized workers who retire in the future.[9] Republicans elected with Tea Party support in 2010, most notably former Governor Scott Walker of Wisconsin, have launched major efforts against public sector unions due in part to state government pension obligations along with the allegation that the unions are too powerful.[10][11]

The academic literature shows substantial evidence that labor unions reduce economic inequality.[12][13] Research suggests that rising income inequality in the United States is partially attributable to the decline of the labor movement and union membership,[14][15][16]: 1 and that this is not only a correlation.[17] Research has also found that unions can harm profitability, employment and business growth rates.[18][19]

History edit

 
Knights of Labor's seal: "An injury to one is a concern to all."

Unions began forming in the mid-19th century in response to the social and economic impact of the Industrial Revolution. National labor unions began to form in the post-Civil War Era. The Knights of Labor emerged as a major force in the late 1880s, but it collapsed because of poor organization, lack of effective leadership, disagreement over goals, and strong opposition from employers and government forces.

The American Federation of Labor, founded in 1886 and led by Samuel Gompers until his death in 1924, proved much more durable. It arose as a loose coalition of various local unions. It helped coordinate and support strikes and eventually became a major player in national politics, usually on the side of the Democrats.

American labor unions benefited greatly from the New Deal policies of Franklin Delano Roosevelt in the 1930s. The Wagner Act, in particular, legally protected the right of unions to organize. Unions from this point developed increasingly closer ties to the Democratic Party, and are considered a backbone element of the New Deal Coalition.

Post-WWII edit

 
Political cartoon showing organized labor marching towards progress, while a shortsighted employer tries to stop labor (1913)

Pro-business conservatives gained control of Congress in 1946, and in 1947 passed the Taft–Hartley Act, drafted by Senator Robert A. Taft. President Truman vetoed it but the Conservative coalition overrode the veto. The veto override had considerable Democratic support, including 106 out of 177 Democrats in the House, and 20 out of 42 Democrats in the Senate.[20] The law, which is still in effect, banned union contributions to political candidates, restricted the power of unions to call strikes that "threatened national security," and forced the expulsion of Communist union leaders (the Supreme Court found the anti-communist provision to be unconstitutional, and it is no longer in force). The unions campaigned vigorously for years to repeal the law but failed. During the late 1950s, the Landrum Griffin Act of 1959 passed in the wake of Congressional investigations of corruption and undemocratic internal politics in the Teamsters and other unions.[21][22]

In 1955, the two largest labor organizations, the AFL and CIO, merged, ending a division of over 20 years. AFL President George Meany became President of the new AFL–CIO, and AFL Secretary-Treasurer William Schnitzler became AFL–CIO Secretary-Treasurer. The draft constitution was primarily written by AFL Vice President Matthew Woll and CIO General Counsel Arthur Goldberg, while the joint policy statements were written by Woll, CIO Secretary-Treasurer James Carey, CIO vice presidents David McDonald and Joseph Curran, Brotherhood of Railway Clerks President George Harrison, and Illinois AFL–CIO President Reuben Soderstrom.[23]

The percentage of workers belonging to a union (or "density") in the United States peaked in 1954 at almost 35% and the total number of union members peaked in 1979 at an estimated 21.0 million.[24][25] Membership has declined since, with private sector union membership beginning a steady decline that continues into the 2010s, but the membership of public sector unions grew steadily.[25]

 
Labor union voting by federal workers at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (1948)

After 1960 public sector unions grew rapidly and secured good wages and high pensions for their members. While manufacturing and farming steadily declined, state- and local-government employment quadrupled from 4 million workers in 1950 to 12 million in 1976 and 16.6 million in 2009.[26] Adding in the 3.7 million federal civilian employees, in 2010 8.4 million government workers were represented by unions,[27] including 31% of federal workers, 35% of state workers and 46% of local workers.[28]

By the 1970s, a rapidly increasing flow of imports (such as automobiles, steel and electronics from Germany and Japan, and clothing and shoes from Asia) undercut American producers.[29] By the 1980s there was a large-scale shift in employment with fewer workers in high-wage sectors and more in the low-wage sectors.[30] Many companies closed or moved factories to Southern states (where unions were weak),[31] countered the threat of a strike by threatening to close or move a plant,[32] or moved their factories offshore to low-wage countries.[33] The number of major strikes and lockouts fell by 97% from 381 in 1970 to 187 in 1980 to only 11 in 2010.[32][34] On the political front, the shrinking unions lost influence in the Democratic Party, and pro-Union liberal Republicans faded away.[35] Union membership among workers in private industry shrank dramatically, though after 1970 there was growth in employees unions of federal, state and local governments.[36][37] The intellectual mood in the 1970s and 1980s favored deregulation and free competition.[38] Numerous industries were deregulated, including airlines, trucking, railroads and telephones, over the objections of the unions involved.[39] The climax came when President Ronald Reagan—a former union president—broke the illegal[40] Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO) strike in 1981, dealing a major blow to unions.[34][41]

Republicans began to push through legislative blueprints to curb the power of public employee unions as well as eliminate business regulations.[33][42][43]

Labor unions in the 21st century edit

 
Union members rally to reject union busting in New Orleans (2019)

Today most labor unions (or trade unions) in the United States are members of one of two larger umbrella organizations: the American Federation of Labor–Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL–CIO) or the Strategic Organizing Center (SOC), which split from the AFL–CIO in 2005–2006.[44] Both organizations advocate policies and legislation favorable to workers in the United States and Canada, and take an active role in politics favoring the Democratic party but not exclusively so. The AFL–CIO is especially concerned with global trade and economic issues.

Private sector unions are regulated by the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), passed in 1935 and amended since then. The law is overseen by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), an independent federal agency. Public sector unions are regulated partly by federal and partly by state laws. In general they have shown robust growth rates, because wages and working conditions are set through negotiations with elected local and state officials.

To join a traditional labor union, workers must either be given voluntary recognition from their employer or have a majority of workers in a bargaining unit vote for union representation.[citation needed] In either case, the government must then certify the newly formed union.[citation needed] Other forms of unionism include minority unionism, solidarity unionism, and the practices of organizations such as the Industrial Workers of the World, which do not always follow traditional organizational models.

Public sector worker unions are governed by labor laws and labor boards in each of the 50 states. Northern states typically model their laws and boards after the NLRA and the NLRB. In other states, public workers have no right to establish a union as a legal entity. (About 40% of public employees in the USA do not have the right to organize a legally established union.)[45][46]

A review conducted by the federal government on pay scale shows that employees in a labor union earn up to 33% more income than their nonunion counterparts, as well as having more job security, and safer and higher-quality work conditions.[47] The median weekly income for union workers was $973 in 2014, compared with $763 for nonunion workers.[1]

New media organizations and later traditional newspapers led a wave of unionization since 2015, spurred by losses during the Great Recession and start-up layoffs. NewsGuild and Writers Guild of America won many of these efforts, including 5,000 journalists across 90 organizations.[48]

Labor negotiations edit

Once the union won the support of a majority of the bargaining unit and is certified in a workplace, it has the sole authority to negotiate the conditions of employment. Under the NLRA, employees can also, if there is no majority support, form a minority union which represents the rights of only those members who choose to join.[49] Businesses, however, do not have to recognize the minority union as a collective bargaining agent for its members, and therefore the minority union's power is limited.[50] This minority model was once widely used, but was discarded when unions began to consistently win majority support. Unions are beginning to revisit the members-only model of unionism, because of new changes to labor law, which unions view as curbing workers' ability to organize.[51]

The employer and the union write the terms and conditions of employment in a legally binding contract. When disputes arise over the contract, most contracts call for the parties to resolve their differences through a grievance process to see if the dispute can be mutually resolved. If the union and the employer still cannot settle the matter, either party can choose to send the dispute to arbitration, where the case is argued before a neutral third party.

 
Worker slogan used during the 2011 Wisconsin protests

Right-to-work statutes forbid unions from negotiating union shops and agency shops. Thus, while unions do exist in "right-to-work" states, they are typically weaker.

Members of labor unions enjoy "Weingarten Rights." If management questions the union member on a matter that may lead to discipline or other changes in working conditions, union members can request representation by a union representative. Weingarten Rights are named for the first Supreme Court decision to recognize those rights.[52]

The NLRA goes farther in protecting the right of workers to organize unions. It protects the right of workers to engage in any "concerted activity" for mutual aid or protection. Thus, no union connection is needed. Concerted activity "in its inception involves only a speaker and a listener, for such activity is an indispensable preliminary step to employee self-organization."[53]

Unions are currently advocating new federal legislation, the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA), that would allow workers to elect union representation by simply signing a support card (card check). The current process established by federal law requires at least 30% of employees to sign cards for the union, then wait 45 to 90 days for a federal official to conduct a secret ballot election in which a simple majority of the employees must vote for the union in order to obligate the employer to bargain.

Unions report that, under the present system, many employers use the 45- to 90-day period to conduct anti-union campaigns. Some opponents of this legislation fear that removing secret balloting from the process will lead to the intimidation and coercion of workers on behalf of the unions. During the 2008 elections, the Employee Free Choice Act had widespread support of many legislators in the House and Senate, and of the President. Since then, support for the "card check" provisions of the EFCA subsided substantially.

Membership edit

 
% of employed US workers with union membership. Source: OECD Data, Trade Union Dataset

Union membership had been declining in the US since 1954, and since 1967, as union membership rates decreased, middle class the middle class share of aggregate income shrank correspondingly.[54] In 2007, the labor department reported the first increase in union memberships in 25 years and the largest increase since 1979. Most of the recent gains in union membership have been in the service sector while the number of unionized employees in the manufacturing sector has declined. Most of the gains in the service sector have come in West Coast states like California where union membership is now at 16.7% compared with a national average of about 12.1%.[55] Historically, the rapid growth of public employee unions since the 1960s has served to mask an even more dramatic decline in private-sector union membership.

At the apex of union density in the 1940s, only about 9.8% of public employees were represented by unions, while 33.9% of private, non-agricultural workers had such representation. In this decade, those proportions have essentially reversed, with 36% of public workers being represented by unions while private sector union density had plummeted to around 7%. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics most recent survey indicates that union membership in the US has risen to 12.4% of all workers, from 12.1% in 2007. For a short period, private sector union membership rebounded, increasing from 7.5% in 2007 to 7.6% in 2008.[1] However, that trend has since reversed. In 2013 there were 14.5 million members in the U.S., compared with 17.7 million in 1983. In 2013, the percentage of workers belonging to a union was 11.3%, compared to 20.1% in 1983. The rate for the private sector was 6.4%, and for the public sector 35.3%.[56]

In 2023, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that Trade Union Membership hit an all-time low in the U.S., dropping from 10.3% to 10.1%.[57][58][59]

Between 2005 and 2014, the National Labor Relations Board recorded 18,577 labor union representation elections; in 11,086 of these elections (60 percent), the majority of workers voted for union representation. Most of the elections (15,517) were triggered by employee petitions for representation, of which unions won 9,933. Less common were elections caused by employee petitions for decertification (2,792, of which unions won 1,070), and employer-filed petitions for either representation or decertification (268, of which unions won 85).[60][61]

Labor education programs edit

 
Union members protest against another government shutdown (2019)

In the US, labor education programs such as the Harvard Trade Union Program[62] created in 1942 by Harvard University professor John Thomas Dunlop sought to educate union members to deal with important contemporary workplace and labor law issues of the day. The Harvard Trade Union Program is currently part of a broader initiative at Harvard Law School called the Labor and Worklife Program[63] that deals with a wide variety of labor and employment issues from union pension investment funds to the effects of nanotechnology on labor markets and the workplace.

Cornell University is known to be one of the leading centers for labor education in the world, establishing the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations in 1945. The school's mission is to prepare leaders, inform national and international employment and labor policy, and improve working lives through undergraduate and graduate education. The school publishes the Industrial and Labor Relations Review and had Frances Perkins on its faculty. The school has six academic departments: Economics, Human Resource Management, International and Comparative Labor, Labor Relations, Organizational Behavior, and Social Statistics. Classes include "Politics of the Global North" and "Economic Analysis of the University."[64][65]

Jurisdiction edit

Labor unions use the term jurisdiction to refer to their claims to represent workers who perform a certain type of work and the right of their members to perform such work. For example, the work of unloading containerized cargo at United States ports, which the International Longshoremen's Association, the International Longshore and Warehouse Union and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters have claimed rightfully should be assigned to workers they represent. A jurisdictional strike is a concerted refusal to work undertaken by a union to assert its members' right to such job assignments and to protest the assignment of disputed work to members of another union or to unorganized workers. Jurisdictional strikes occur most frequently in the United States in the construction industry.[66]

Unions also use jurisdiction to refer to the geographical boundaries of their operations, as in those cases in which a national or international union allocates the right to represent workers among different local unions based on the place of those workers' employment, either along geographical lines or by adopting the boundaries between political jurisdictions.[66]

Labor-environment coalitions edit

To help counter their steady decline in power, in the 1980s labor unions began to form coalitions locally, nationally, and globally with religious groups, social movements, politicians, and sometimes employers.[67] There was a general shift away from specific, interest group advocacy and towards large-scale pro-democracy movements.[67]

Coalitions between labor unions and environmental groups are prominent in interest areas of global trade and health.[67] The unification was unique given the two sides' rocky history and notable differences. Unions are very hierarchical and prioritize jobs, with typically working-class members, while environmental groups tend to consist of middle class and white-collar members and focus primarily on issues related to climate and the environment.[25] Tensions arose in the past when environmental groups pushed for environmental protection regulations without considering the effects on jobs or the side effects on worker safety, unintentionally antagonizing unions.[25]

Labor unions would sometimes side with employers even though employers are often seen as antithetical to unionization, since no employers mean no jobs.[68] Labor unions have sometimes worked against environmental groups when environmental activism was seen as limiting to economic growth.[25] This antagonization was further encouraged by employers in a politically motivated strategy referred to as “job blackmail,” and has been effective in pitting the movements against each other.[25]

Labor unions and environmental groups first began to collaborate internationally when the Reagan administration in the 1980s launched attacks on environmental regulations around the same time that they fired thousands of striking air traffic control employees.[67]

Public opinion edit

Although not as overwhelmingly supportive as it was from the 1930s through the early 1960s, a clear majority of the American public approves of labor unions. The Gallup organization has tracked public opinion of unions since 1936, when it found that 72 percent approved of unions. The overwhelming approval declined in the late 1960s, but – except for one poll in 2009 in which the unions received a favorable rating by only 48 percent of those interviewed, majorities have always supported labor unions. A Gallup Poll released August 2018 showed 62% of respondents approving unions, the highest level in over a decade. Disapproval of unions was expressed by 32%.[69] They polled opinion again in August 2022, finding that approval had risen to 71%, the highest positive opinion since the year 1965, and that approval had been consistently rising since 2016, where it was found to be 56%.[70]

On the question of whether or not unions should have more influence or less influence, Gallup has found the public consistently split since Gallup first posed the question in 2000, with no majority favoring either more influence or less influence. In August 2018, 39 percent wanted unions to have more influence, 29 percent less influence, with 26 percent wanting the influence of labor unions to remain about the same.[71]

A Pew Research Center poll from 2009 to 2010 found a drop in labor union support in the midst of The Great Recession[72] sitting at 41% favorable and 40% unfavorable. In 2018, union support rose to 55% favorable with just 33% unfavorable[73] Despite this union membership had continued to fall.[74]

Possible causes of drop in membership edit

 
As union membership declined income inequality rose.[75] The US does not require employee representatives on boards of directors, or elected work councils.[76]

Although most industrialized countries have seen a drop in unionization rates, the drop in union density (the unionized proportion of the working population) has been more significant in the United States than elsewhere.[14]

Global trends edit

 
Labor union membership by country
 
Hours Worked Compared to Earnings Per Week (OECD)

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics surveyed the histories of union membership rates in industrialized countries from 1970 to 2003, and found that of 20 advanced economies which had union density statistics going back to 1970, 16 of them had experienced drops in union density from 1970 to 2003. Over the same period during which union density in the US declined from 23.5 percent to 12.4 percent, some countries saw even steeper drops. Australian unionization fell from 50.2 percent in 1970 to 22.9 percent in 2003, in New Zealand it dropped from 55.2 percent to 22.1 percent, and in Austria union participation fell from 62.8 percent down to 35.4 percent. All the English-speaking countries studied saw union membership decline to some degree. In the United Kingdom, union participation fell from 44.8 percent in 1970 to 29.3 percent in 2003. In Ireland the decline was from 53.7 percent down to 35.3 percent. Canada had one of the smallest declines over the period, going from 31.6 percent in 1970 to 28.4 percent in 2003. Most of the countries studied started in 1970 with higher participation rates than the US, but France, which in 1970 had a union participation rate of 21.7 percent, by 2003 had fallen to 8.3 percent. The remaining four countries which had gained in union density were Finland, Sweden, Denmark, and Belgium.[77]

Popularity edit

Public approval of unions climbed during the 1980s much as it did in other industrialized nations,[78] but declined to below 50% for the first time in 2009 during the Great Recession. It is not clear if this is a long-term trend or a function of a high unemployment rate which historically correlates with lower public approval of labor unions.[79]

One explanation for loss of public support is simply the lack of union power or critical mass. No longer do a sizable percentage of American workers belong to unions, or have family members who do. Unions no longer carry the "threat effect": the power of unions to raise wages of non-union shops by virtue of the threat of unions to organize those shops.[79]

Polls of public opinion and labor unions edit

 
A historical comparison of union membership as a percentage of all workers and union support in the U.S.

A New York Times/CBS Poll found that 60% of Americans opposed restricting collective bargaining while 33% were for it. The poll also found that 56% of Americans opposed reducing pay of public employees compared to the 37% who approved. The details of the poll also stated that 26% of those surveyed, thought pay and benefits for public employees were too high, 25% thought too low, and 36% thought about right. Mark Tapscott of the Washington Examiner criticized the poll, accusing it of over-sampling union and public employee households.[80]

A Gallup poll released on March 9, 2011, showed that Americans were more likely to support limiting the collective bargaining powers of state employee unions to balance a state's budget (49%) than disapprove of such a measure (45%), while 6% had no opinion. 66% of Republicans approved of such a measure as did 51% of independents. Only 31% of Democrats approved.[81]

A Gallup poll released on March 11, 2011, showed that nationwide, Americans were more likely to give unions a negative word or phrase when describing them (38%) than a positive word or phrase (34%). 17% were neutral and 12% didn't know. Republicans were much more likely to say a negative term (58%) than Democrats (19%). Democrats were much more likely to say a positive term (49%) than Republicans (18%).[82]

A nationwide Gallup poll (margin of error ±4%) released on April 1, 2011,[83] showed the following;

  • When asked if they supported the labor unions or the governors in state disputes; 48% said they supported the unions, 39% said the governors, 4% said neither, and 9% had no opinion.
  • Women supported the governors much less than men. 45% of men said they supported the governors, while 46% said they supported the unions. This compares to only 33% of women who said they supported the governors and 50% who said they supported the unions.
  • All areas of the US (East, Midwest, South, West) were more likely to support unions than the governors. The largest gap being in the East with 35% supporting the governors and 52% supporting the unions, and the smallest gap being in the West with 41% supporting the governors and 44% the unions.
  • 18- to 34-year-olds were much more likely to support unions than those over 34 years of age. Only 27% of 18- to 34-year-olds supported the governors, while 61% supported the unions. Americans ages 35 to 54 slightly supported the unions more than governors, with 40% supporting the governors and 43% the unions. Americans 55 and older were tied when asked, with 45% supporting the governors and 45% the unions.
  • Republicans were much more likely to support the governors when asked with 65% supporting the governors and 25% the unions. Independents slightly supported unions more, with 40% supporting the governors and 45% the unions. Democrats were overwhelmingly in support of the unions. 70% of Democrats supported the unions, while only 19% supported the governors.
  • Those who said they were following the situation not too closely or not at all supported the unions over governors, with a 14–point (45% to 31%) margin. Those who said they were following the situation somewhat closely supported the unions over governors by a 52–41 margin. Those who said that they were following the situation very closely were only slightly more likely to support the unions over the governors, with a 49–48 margin.
 
Unions and workers protesting together for higher wages (2015)

A nationwide Gallup poll released on August 31, 2011, revealed the following:[84]

  • 52% of Americans approved of labor unions, unchanged from 2010.
  • 78% of Democrats approved of labor unions, up from 71% in 2010.
  • 52% of Independents approved of labor unions, up from 49% in 2010.
  • 26% of Republicans approved of labor unions, down from 34% in 2010.

A nationwide Gallup poll released on September 1, 2011, revealed the following:[85]

  • 55% of Americans believed that labor unions will become weaker in the United States as time goes by, an all-time high. This compared to 22% who said their power would stay the same, and 20% who said they would get stronger.
  • The majority of Republicans and Independents believed labor unions would further weaken by a 58% and 57% percentage margin respectively. A plurality of Democrats believed the same, at 46%.
  • 42% of Americans want labor unions to have less influence, tied for the all-time high set in 2009. 30% wanted more influence and 25% wanted the same amount of influence.
  • The majority of Republicans wanted labor unions to have less influence, at 69%.
  • A plurality of Independents wanted labor unions to have less influence, at 40%.
  • A plurality of Democrats wanted labor unions to have more influence, at 45%.
  • The majority of Americans believed labor unions mostly helped members of unions by a 68 to 28 margin.
  • A plurality of Americans believed labor unions mostly helped the companies where workers are unionized by a 48–44 margin.
  • A plurality of Americans believed labor unions mostly helped state and local governments by a 47–45 margin.
  • A plurality of Americans believed labor unions mostly hurt the US economy in general by a 49–45 margin.
  • The majority of Americans believed labor unions mostly hurt workers who are not members of unions by a 56–34 margin.

Institutional environments edit

A broad range of forces have been identified as potential contributors to the drop in union density across countries. Sano and Williamson outline quantitative studies that assess the relevance of these factors across countries.[86] The first relevant set of factors relate to the receptiveness of unions' institutional environments. For example, the presence of a Ghent system (where unions are responsible for the distribution of unemployment insurance) and of centralized collective bargaining (organized at a national or industry level as opposed to local or firm level) have both been shown to give unions more bargaining power and to correlate positively to higher rates of union density.[86]

Unions have enjoyed higher rates of success in locations where they have greater access to the workplace as an organizing space (as determined both by law and by employer acceptance), and where they benefit from a corporatist relationship to the state and are thus allowed to participate more directly in the official governance structure. Moreover, the fluctuations of business cycles, particularly the rise and fall of unemployment rates and inflation, are also closely linked to changes in union density.[86]

Labor legislation edit

 
Workers speak in support of the Workplace Democracy Act which makes it easier to unionize (2018)

Labor lawyer Thomas Geoghegan attributes the drop to the long-term effects of the 1947 Taft–Hartley Act, which slowed and then halted labor's growth and then, over many decades, enabled management to roll back labor's previous gains.[87]

First, it ended organizing on the grand, 1930s scale. It outlawed mass picketing, secondary strikes of neutral employers, sit downs: in short, everything [CIO founder John L.] Lewis did in the 1930s.

The second effect of Taft–Hartley was subtler and slower-working. It was to hold up any new organizing at all, even on a quiet, low-key scale. For example, Taft–Hartley ended "card checks." … Taft–Hartley required hearings, campaign periods, secret-ballot elections, and sometimes more hearings, before a union could be officially recognized.

It also allowed and even encouraged employers to threaten workers who want to organize. Employers could hold "captive meetings," bring workers into the office and chew them out for thinking about the Union.
And Taft–Hartley led to the "union-busting" that started in the late 1960s and continues today. It started when a new "profession" of labor consultants began to convince employers that they could violate the [pro-labor 1935] Wagner Act, fire workers at will, fire them deliberately for exercising their legal rights, and nothing would happen. The Wagner Act had never had any real sanctions.

So why hadn't employers been violating the Wagner Act all along? Well, at first, in the 1930s and 1940s, they tried, and they got riots in the streets: mass picketing, secondary strikes, etc. But after Taft–Hartley, unions couldn't retaliate like this, or they would end up with penalty fines and jail sentences.[87]

In general, scholars debate the influence of politics in determining union strength in the US and other countries. One argument is that political parties play an expected role in determining union strength, with left-wing governments generally promoting greater union density, while others contest this finding by pointing out important counterexamples and explaining the reverse causality inherent in this relationship.[88]

Economic globalization edit

More recently, as unions have become increasingly concerned with the impacts of market integration on their well-being, scholars have begun to assess whether popular concerns about a global "race to the bottom" are reflected in cross-country comparisons of union strength. These scholars use foreign direct investment (FDI) and the size of a country's international trade as a percentage of its GDP to assess a country's relative degree of market integration. These researchers typically find that globalization does affect union density, but is dependent on other factors, such as unions' access to the workplace and the centralization of bargaining.[89]

Sano and Williamson argue that globalization's impact is conditional upon a country's labor history.[90] In the United States in particular, which has traditionally had relatively low levels of union density, globalization did not appear to significantly affect union density.

Employer strategies edit

 
Illegal union firing increased during the Reagan administration and has continued since.[91]

Studies focusing more narrowly on the U.S. labor movement corroborate the comparative findings about the importance of structural factors, but tend to emphasize the effects of changing labor markets due to globalization to a greater extent. Bronfenbrenner notes that changes in the economy, such as increased global competition, capital flight, and the transitions from a manufacturing to a service economy and to a greater reliance on transitory and contingent workers, accounts for only a third of the decline in union density.[92]

Bronfenbrenner claims that the federal government in the 1980s was largely responsible for giving employers the perception that they could engage in aggressive strategies to repress the formation of unions. Richard Freeman also points to the role of repressive employer strategies in reducing unionization, and highlights the way in which a state ideology of anti-unionism tacitly accepted these strategies[78]

Goldfield writes that the overall effects of globalization on unionization in the particular case of the United States may be understated in econometric studies on the subject.[93] He writes that the threat of production shifts reduces unions' bargaining power even if it does not eliminate them, and also claims that most of the effects of globalization on labor's strength are indirect. They are most present in change towards a neoliberal political context that has promoted the deregulation and privatization of some industries and accepted increased employer flexibility in labor markets.

Union responses to globalization edit

 
Studies done by Kate Bronfenbrenner at Cornell University show the adverse effects of globalization towards unions due to illegal threats of firing.[94]

Regardless of the actual impact of market integration on union density or on workers themselves, organized labor has been engaged in a variety of strategies to limit the agenda of globalization and to promote labor regulations in an international context. Labor rights had failed to be included in international trade negotiations in Geneva in 1948 and in Tokyo in 1978.[95] But they eventually were brought up by the US in the Uruguay Round in 1994 and were decidedly left to the jurisdiction of the International Labor Organization.[95] Summers argues that this decision to shift all responsibility of labor rights to the ILO essentially extinguished the possibility of including labor standards in any meaningful way, as the ILO lacks any enforceable mechanism to address instances of rights violations.[95] It was around this time that US labor unions began to step in to advocate for rights in free trade negotiations.

In 1994, labor unions were one of the many groups protesting The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) being negotiated at the time.[96] Pro-NAFTA advocates launched campaigns which claimed that NAFTA and other free trade deals would contribute to employment in the US.[97] While this may be true, Summers argues that US exports tend to be capital-intensive, while imports tend to be labor-intensive, and thus deals like NAFTA would further contribute to the trend of more jobs being lost than created.[95] In the fight to preserve employment and fight against policies which would contribute to environmental damage, the negotiations became a catalyst for the rise of coalition building across sectors, namely between labor unions and environmentalist groups, as well as across borders, between Mexican, US, and Canadian advocacy groups.[96]

However, Mayer has written that it was precisely unions' opposition to NAFTA overall that jeopardized organized labor's ability to influence the debate on labor standards in a significant way.[98] During Clinton's presidential campaign, labor unions wanted NAFTA to include a side deal to provide for a kind of international social charter, a set of standards that would be enforceable both in domestic courts and through international institutions. Mickey Kantor, then U.S. trade representative, had strong ties to organized labor and believed that he could get unions to come along with the agreement, particularly if they were given a strong voice in the negotiation process.[98]

When it became clear that Mexico would not stand for this kind of an agreement, some critics from the labor movement would not settle for any viable alternatives. In response, part of the labor movement wanted to declare their open opposition to the agreement, and to push for NAFTA's rejection in Congress.[98] Ultimately, the ambivalence of labor groups led those within the Administration who supported NAFTA to believe that strengthening NAFTA's labor side agreement, the North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation (NAALC), too much would cost more votes among Republicans than it would garner among Democrats, and would make it harder for the United States to elicit support from Mexico.[99]

Graubart writes that, despite unions' open disappointment with the outcome of this labor-side negotiation, labor activists, including the AFL–CIO have used the NAALC's citizen petition, containing a unique cross-border mechanism, to highlight ongoing political campaigns and struggles in their home countries.[100][101] He claims that despite the relative weakness of the legal provisions themselves, the side-agreement has served a legitimizing functioning, giving certain social struggles a new kind of standing. Kay argues that in the process of fighting NAFTA, activists groups had gained a "power-to"—the power of mobilizing and creating transnational networks, which ultimately helped them to defeat the Multilateral Agreements on Investment in 1998 as well as the Free Trade Agreement of the Americas in 2005.[96]

Transnational labor regulation edit

Unions have recently been engaged in a developing field of transnational labor regulation embodied in corporate codes of conduct. However, O'Brien cautions that unions have been only peripherally involved in this process, and remain ambivalent about its potential effects.[102] They worry that these codes could have legitimizing effects on companies that do not actually live up to good practices, and that companies could use codes to excuse or distract attention from the repression of unions.

Braun and Gearhart note that although unions do participate in the structure of a number of these agreements, their original interest in codes of conduct differed from the interests of human rights and other non-governmental activists. Unions believed that codes of conduct would be important first steps in creating written principles that a company would be compelled to comply with in later organizing contracts, but did not foresee the establishment of monitoring systems such as the Fair Labor Association. These authors point out that such organizations are motivated by power, want to gain insider status politically and are accountable to a constituency that requires them to provide them with direct benefits.[103]

In contrast, activists from the non-governmental sector are motivated by ideals, are free of accountability and gain legitimacy from being political outsiders. Therefore, the interests of unions are not likely to align well with the interests of those who draft and monitor corporate codes of conduct.

Arguing against the idea that high union wages necessarily make manufacturing uncompetitive in a globalized economy was labor lawyer Thomas Geoghegan.

Busting unions, in the U.S. manner, as the prime way of competing with China and other countries [does not work]. It's no accident that the social democracies, Sweden, France, and Germany, which kept on paying high wages, now have more industry than the U.S. or the UK. … [T]hat's what the U.S. and the UK did: they smashed the unions, in the belief that they had to compete on cost. The result? They quickly ended up wrecking their industrial base.[104]

Unions have made some attempts to organize across borders. Eder observed that transnational organizing is not a new phenomenon but has been facilitated by technological change.[105] Nevertheless, he claimed that while unions pay lip service to global solidarity, they still act largely in their national self-interest. He argued that unions in the global North are becoming increasingly depoliticized while those in the South grow politically, and that global differentiation of production processes leads to divergent strategies and interests in different regions of the world. These structural differences tend to hinder effective global solidarity. However, in light of the weakness of international labor, Herod wrote that globalization of production need not be met by a globalization of union strategies in order to be contained. Herod also pointed out that local strategies, such as the United Auto Workers' strike against General Motors in 1998, can sometimes effectively interrupt global production processes in ways that they could not before the advent of widespread market integration. Thus, workers need not be connected organizationally to others around the world to effectively influence the behavior of a transnational corporation.[106]

Impact edit

A 2018 study in the Economic History Review found that the rise of labor unions in the 1930s and 1940s was associated with a reduction in income inequality.[107] A 2020 study found that congressional representatives were more responsive to the interests of the poor in districts with higher unionization rates.[108] Another 2020 study found an association between state level adoption of parental leave legislation and labor union strength.[109] A 2021 study in the ILR Review found that state union density was associated with a reduction in poverty in both unionized and non-unionized households.[110]

According to sociologist Matthew Desmond of Princeton University, the power of labor unions in the post-war era till the late 1970s played a significant role in ensuring that an expanding US economy "shared its bounty" with the working class and mitigated labor exploitation, making it a time when "honest work delivered a solid paycheck." He acknowledges, however, that racism, attacks from corporate lobbyists who "made deep inroads to both parties," and a changing economy weakened unions and "prevented the labor movement from ever realizing its full potential."[111]

The Hoover Institution think tank has asserted that the economic inequality argument made in favor of trade unions "misfires on several fronts. Those high union wages could not survive in the face of foreign competition or new nonunionized firms. The only way a union can provide gains for its members is to extract some fraction of the profits that firms enjoy when they hold monopoly positions." The think tank has also asserted that the decline of trade unions in the United States "cannot drive widespread inequality for the entire population, which is also affected by a rise in the knowledge economy as well as a general aging of the population."[112]

A 2020 study in the American Journal of Political Science suggested that when white people obtain union membership, they become less racially resentful.[113] Higher union density has been associated with lower suicide/overdose deaths.[114] Decreased unionization rates in the United States have been linked to an increase in occupational fatalities.[115]

Other research has found that unions can harm profitability, employment and business growth rates.[18][19] The outsourcing of labour from the United States to Asia, Latin America, and Africa has been partially driven by increasing costs of union partnership, which gives other countries a comparative advantage in labour, making it more efficient to perform labour-intensive work there.[116]

The weakening of unions has been linked to more favorable electoral outcomes for the Republican Party.[117][118][119] However, Republican-controlled states are less likely to adopt more restrictive labor policies when unions are strong in the state.[120]

See also edit

History:

International:

General:

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c "Union Members Summary". Bureau of Labor Statistics. Retrieved October 1, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c "UNION MEMBERS — 2022" (PDF). Bureau of Labor Statistics. January 19, 2023. The union membership rate—the percent of wage and salary workers who were members of unions—was 10.1 percent in 2022, down from 10.3 percent in 2021, ... The union membership rate of public-sector workers (33.1 percent) continued to be more than five times higher than the rate of private-sector workers (6.0 percent).
  3. ^ a b c Rosalsky, Greg (February 28, 2023). "You may have heard of the 'union boom.' The numbers tell a different story". NPR. Headline writers began declaring things like, "Employees everywhere are organizing" and that the United States was seeing a "union boom." In September, the White House asserted "Organized labor appears to be having a moment." However, the Bureau of Labor Statistics recently released its union data for 2022. And their data shows that — far from a resurgence — the share of American workers in a union has continued to decline. Last year, the union membership rate fell by 0.2 percentage points to 10.1% — the lowest on record.
  4. ^ See: Trade Union Density. OECD. StatExtracts. Retrieved: January 1, 2017.
  5. ^ See also Trade union#Prevalence worldwide
  6. ^ Not With a Bang, But a Whimper: The Long, Slow Death Spiral of America's Labor Movement, Richard Yeselson, The New Republic, June 6, 2012
  7. ^ 8-31-2004 Union Membership Trends in the United States Gerald Mayer. Congressional Research Service. Aug 31, 2004
  8. ^ Mayer, Brian (May 2009). "Cross-Movement Coalition Formation: Bridging the Labor-Environment Divide*". Sociological Inquiry. 79 (2): 219–239. doi:10.1111/j.1475-682X.2009.00286.x.
  9. ^ Alicia H. Munnell (2012). State and Local Pensions: What Now?. Brookings Institution Press. pp. 4–5. ISBN 978-0815724131.
  10. ^ Nelson Lichtenstein, "Can This Election Save the Unions?," Dissent Summer 2012.
  11. ^ Jason Stein and Patrick Marley, More than They Bargained For: Scott Walker, Unions, and the Fight for Wisconsin (2013) is favorable toward Walker, who beat off a recall challenge and was easily reelected in 2014
  12. ^ Ahlquist, John S. (2017). "Labor Unions, Political Representation, and Economic Inequality". Annual Review of Political Science. 20 (1): 409–432. doi:10.1146/annurev-polisci-051215-023225.
  13. ^ Farber, Henry S; Herbst, Daniel; Kuziemko, Ilyana; Naidu, Suresh (2021). "Unions and Inequality over the Twentieth Century: New Evidence from Survey Data*". The Quarterly Journal of Economics. 136 (3): 1325–1385. doi:10.1093/qje/qjab012. ISSN 0033-5533.
  14. ^ a b Doree Armstrong (February 12, 2014). Jake Rosenfeld explores the sharp decline of union membership, influence. UW Today. Retrieved December 19, 2014. See also: Jake Rosenfeld (2014) What Unions No Longer Do. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674725115
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    • "A 2011 study drew a link between the decline in union membership since 1973 and expanding wage disparity. Those trends have since continued, said Bruce Western, a professor of sociology at Harvard University who co-authored the study."
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References edit

Surveys
  • Arnesen, Eric, ed. Encyclopedia of U.S. Labor and Working-Class History (2006), 3 vol; 2064pp; 650 articles by experts
  • Beard, Mary Ritter. A Short History of the American Labor Movement 1920, 176 pages online edition
  • Beik, Millie, ed. Labor Relations: Major Issues in American History (2005) over 100 annotated primary documents
  • Boris, Eileen, and Nelson Lichtenstein, eds. Major Problems In The History Of American Workers: Documents and Essays (2002)
  • Brody, David. In Labor's Cause: Main Themes on the History of the American Worker (1993)
  • Browne, Waldo Ralph. What's what in the Labor Movement: A Dictionary of Labor Affairs and Labor (1921) 577pp; encyclopedia of labor terms, organizations and history. complete text online
  • Dubofsky, Melvyn, and Foster Rhea Dulles. Labor in America: A History (2004), textbook, based on earlier textbooks by Dulles.
  • Dubofsky, Melvyn, and Warren Van Tine, eds. Labor Leaders in America (1987) biographies of key leaders, written by scholars
  • LeBlanc, Paul. A Short History of the U.S. Working Class: From Colonial Times to the Twenty-First Century (1999), 160pp
  • Lichtenstein, Nelson. State of the Union: A Century of American Labor (2003)
  • Mauer, Michael. The Union Member's Complete Guide (2019)
  • McGaughey, E 'Democracy or Oligarchy? Models of Union Governance in the UK, Germany and US' (2017) ssrn.com
  • Minchin, Timothy J. Labor under Fire: A History of the AFL–CIO since 1979 (U of North Carolina Press, 2017). xvi, 414 pp.
  • Perlman, Selig. A History of Trade Unionism in the United States 1922, 313 pages online edition
  • Taylor, Paul F. The ABC-CLIO Companion to the American Labor Movement (1993) 237pp; short encyclopedia
  • Zieger, Robert H., and Gilbert J. Gall, American Workers, American Unions: The Twentieth Century(3rd ed. 2002)
  • Zieger, Robert H. For Jobs and Freedom: Race and Labor in America Since 1865 (2007)
To 1900
  • Commons, John R. History of Labour in the United States – vol 1 and vol. 2 1860–1896 (1918) (note spelling of "Labour")
  • Commons, John R. "American Shoemakers, 1648-1895: A Sketch of Industrial Evolution," Quarterly Journal of Economics 24 (November 1909), 39–83. in JSTOR
  • Commons, John R. ed. Trade Unionism and Labor Problems (1905) articles by experts on unions and working condition online edition
  • Grob, Gerald N. Workers and Utopia: A Study of Ideological Conflict in the American Labor Movement, 1865–1900 (1961)
  • Hall, John P. "The Knights of St. Crispin in Massachusetts, 1869–1878," Journal of Economic History 18 (June 1958), p 161–175 in JSTOR
  • Laslett, John H. M. Labor and the Left: A Study of Socialist and Radical Influences in the American Labor Movement, 1881–1924 (1970)
  • Mandel, Bernard. Samuel Gompers: A Biography (1963)
  • Orth, Samuel P. The Armies of Labor: A Chronicle of the Organized Wage-Earners (1919) short popular overview online edition
  • Taillon, Paul Michel. Good, Reliable, White Men: Railroad Brotherhoods, 1877-1917 (2009)
  • Taft, Philip Taft and Philip Ross, "American Labor Violence: Its Causes, Character, and Outcome," in The History of Violence in America: A Report to the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence, ed. Hugh Davis Graham and Ted Robert Gurr, 1969. online edition
  • Van Tine, Warren R. The Making of the Labor Bureaucrat: Union Leadership in the United States, 1870–1920 (1973)
  • Voss, Kim. The Making of American Exceptionalism: The Knights of Labor and Class Formation in the Nineteenth Century (1993)
  • Weir, Robert E. Beyond Labor's Veil: The Culture of the Knights of Labor (1996)
  • Bibliography of online resources on railway labor in late 19th century August 1, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
1900–1932
  • Bernstein, Irving. The Lean Years: A History of the American Worker, 1920–33 (1966)
  • Brody, David. Labor in Crisis: The Steel Strike of 1919 (1965)
  • Dubofsky, Melvyn and Warren Van Tine. John L. Lewis: A Biography (1986)
  • Brody, David. Labor in Crisis: The Steel Strike of 1919 (1965)
  • Faue, Elizabeth. Community of Suffering & Struggle: Women, Men, and the Labor Movement in Minneapolis, 1915–1945 (1991)
  • Fraser, Steve. Labor Will Rule: Sidney Hillman and the Rise of American Labor (1993)
  • Gordon, Colin. New Deals: Business, Labor, and Politics, 1920–1935 (1994)
  • Greene, Julie. Pure and Simple Politics: The American Federation of Labor and Political Activism, 1881–1917 (1998)
  • Hooker, Clarence. Life in the Shadows of the Crystal Palace, 1910–1927: Ford Workers in the Model T Era (1997)
  • Laslett, John H. M. Labor and the Left: A Study of Socialist and Radical Influences in the American Labor Movement, 1881–1924 (1970)
  • Karson, Marc. American Labor Unions and Politics, 1900–1918 (1958)
  • McCartin, Joseph A. Labor's Great War: The Struggle for Industrial Democracy and the Origins of Modern American Labor Relations, 1912–1921 (1997)
  • Mandel, Bernard. Samuel Gompers: A Biography (1963)
  • Meyer, Stephen. The Five Dollar Day: Labor Management and Social Control in the Ford Motor Company, 1908–1921 (1981)
  • Mink, Gwendolyn. Old Labor and New Immigrants in American Political Development: Union, Party, and State, 1875–1920 (1986)
  • Orth, Samuel P. The Armies of Labor: A Chronicle of the Organized Wage-Earners (1919) short overview
  • Quint, Howard H. The Forging of American Socialism: Origins of the Modern Movement (1964)
  • Warne, Colston E. ed. The Steel Strike of 1919 (1963), primary and secondary documents
  • Zieger, Robert. Republicans and Labor, 1919–1929 (1969)
Primary sources
  • Gompers, Samuel. Seventy Years of Life and Labor: An Autobiography (1925)
1935–1955
  • Bernstein, Irving. Turbulent Years: A History of the American Worker, 1933–1941 (1970)
  • Boyle, Kevin. The UAW and the Heyday of American Liberalism, 1945–1968 (1995)
  • Campbell, D'Ann. "Sisterhood versus the Brotherhoods: Women in Unions" Women at War With America: Private Lives in a Patriotic Era (1984).
  • Dubofsky, Melvyn and Warren Van Time John L. Lewis (1986).
  • Faue, Elizabeth. Community of Suffering & Struggle: Women, Men, and the Labor Movement in Minneapolis, 1915–1945 (1991), social history
  • Fraser, Steve. Labor Will Rule: Sidney Hillman and the Rise of American Labor (1993).
  • Galenson, Walter. The CIO Challenge to the AFL: A History of the American Labor Movement, 1935–1941 (1960)
  • Gordon, Colin. New Deals: Business, Labor, and Politics, 1920–1935 (1994)
  • Jensen, Richard J. "The Causes and Cures of Unemployment in the Great Depression," Journal of Interdisciplinary History 19 (1989) p. 553–583
  • Kennedy, David M. Freedom From Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929–1945 (1999) recent narrative.
  • Lichtenstein, Nelson. Labor's War at Home: The CIO in World War II (2003)
  • Lichtenstein, Nelson. The Most Dangerous Man in Detroit: Walter Reuther and the Fate of American Labor (1995)
  • Miller, Sally M., and Daniel A. Cornford eds. American Labor in the Era of World War II (1995), essays by historians, mostly on California
  • Seidman; Joel. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen: The Internal Political Life of a National Union (1962)
  • Vittoz, Stanley. New Deal Labor Policy and the American Industrial Economy (1987)
  • Zieger, Robert H. The CIO, 1935–1955 (1995)
Fair Employment FEPC
  • Collins, William J. "Race, Roosevelt, and Wartime Production: Fair Employment in World War II Labor Markets," American Economic Review 91:1 (March 2001), pp. 272–286
  • Kersten, Andrew Edmund. Race, Jobs, and the War: The FEPC in the Midwest, 1941-46 (2000)
  • Reed, Merl E. Seedtime for the Modern Civil Rights Movement: The President's Committee on Fair Employment Practice, 1941–1946 (1991)
Taft–Hartley and the NLRA
  • Abraham, Steven E. "The Impact of the Taft–Hartley Act on the Balance of Power in Industrial Relations" American Business Law Journal Vol. 33, 1996
  • Ballam, Deborah A. "The Impact of the National Labor Relations Act on the U.S. Labor Movement" American Business Law Journal, Vol. 32, 1995
  • Brooks, George W., Milton Derber, David A. McCabe, Philip Taft. Interpreting the Labor Movement (1952)
  • Gall, Gilbert J. The Politics of Right to Work: The Labor Federations as Special Interests, 1943–1979 (1988)
  • Hartley Jr. Fred A., and Robert A. Taft. Our New National Labor Policy: The Taft–Hartley Act and the Next Steps (1948)
  • Lee, R. Alton. Truman and Taft–Hartley: A Question of Mandate (1966)
  • Millis, Harry A., and Emily Clark Brown. From the Wagner Act to Taft–Hartley: A Study of National Labor Policy and Labor Relations (1950)
Primary sources
  • Christman, Henry M. ed. Walter P. Reuther: Selected Papers (1961)
1955–present
  • Bennett, James T., and Bruce E. Kaufman. What do unions do?: a twenty-year perspective (2007)
  • Dark; Taylor E. The Unions and the Democrats: An Enduring Alliance (1999)
  • Dine, Philip. State of the Unions: How Labor Can Strengthen the Middle Class, Improve Our Economy, and Regain Political Influence (2007)
  • Fantasia, Rick, and Kim Voss. Hard Work: Remaking the American Labor Movement (2004)
  • Galenson, Walter; The American Labor Movement, 1955–1995 (1996)
  • Goldberg, Arthur J. AFL–CIO, Labor United (1956)
  • Leiter, Robert D. The Teamsters Union: A Study of Its Economic Impact (1957)
  • Lichtenstein, Nelson. "Two Roads Forward for Labor: The AFL–CIO's New Agenda." Dissent 61.1 (2014): 54–58. Online
  • Lipset, Seymour Martin, ed. Unions in Transition: Entering the Second Century (1986)
  • Mort, Jo-Ann, ed. Not Your Father's Union Movement: Inside the AFL–CIO (2002)
  • Rosenfeld, Jake. What Unions No Longer Do (Harvard University Press, 2014) ISBN 0674725115
  • Yates, Michael D. Why Unions Matter (2009)

External links edit

  • AFL–CIO official website
  • Change to Win Federation official website
  • The Challenges of Today's Labor Unions
  • The Cost of a Decline in Unions (February 2015), Nicholas Kristof, The New York Times
  • The incredible decline of American unions, in one animated map (February 2015), Ana Swanson, The Washington Post
  • What Happened to Unions in the Midwest? (Feb. 2015), Melanie Trottman and Eric Morath, The Wall Street Journal
  • Unions still matter (April 2015), Sean McElwee, Al Jazeera America.
  • Americans Don't Miss Manufacturing – They Miss Unions. FiveThirtyEight, May 13, 2016.
  • The Economic Outlook for Millennials Is Bleak. Now They’re Unionizing in Record Numbers. Mother Jones. February 9, 2018.
  • Coronavirus fight: Some US worker unions become more aggressive. Al Jazeera. May 1, 2020.

labor, unions, united, states, labor, unions, represent, united, states, workers, many, industries, recognized, under, labor, since, 1935, enactment, national, labor, relations, their, activity, today, centers, collective, bargaining, over, wages, benefits, wo. Labor unions represent United States workers in many industries recognized under US labor law since the 1935 enactment of the National Labor Relations Act Their activity today centers on collective bargaining over wages benefits and working conditions for their membership and on representing their members in disputes with management over violations of contract provisions Larger trade unions also typically engage in lobbying activities and electioneering at the state and federal level Labor unions in the United StatesHotel union workers strike with the slogan One job should be enough National organization s AFL CIO SOC IWWRegulatory authorityUnited States Department of Labor National Labor Relations BoardPrimary legislationNational Labor Relations Act Taft Hartley ActTotal union membership14 3 million 2022 1 Percentage of workforce unionized10 1 2022 Public 33 1 Private 6 0 International Labour OrganizationUnited States is a member of the ILOConvention ratificationFreedom of AssociationNot ratifiedRight to OrganiseNot ratifiedMost unions in the United States are aligned with one of two larger umbrella organizations the AFL CIO created in 1955 and the Change to Win Federation current Strategic Organizing Center SOC which split from the American Federation of Labor Congress of Industrial Organisations AFL CIO in 2005 Both advocate policies and legislation on behalf of workers in the United States and Canada and take an active role in politics The AFL CIO is especially concerned with global trade issues The percentage of workers belonging to a union or total labor union density varies by country In 2022 it was 10 1 in the United States compared to 20 1 in 1983 2 3 There were 14 3 million members in the U S in 2022 down from 17 7 million in 1983 2 3 Union membership in the private sector has fallen to 6 0 one fifth that of public sector workers at 33 1 2022 2 3 From a global perspective in 2016 the US had the fifth lowest trade union density of the 36 OECD member nations 4 5 In the 21st century the most prominent unions are among public sector employees such as city employees government workers teachers and police Members of unions are disproportionately older male and residents of the Northeast the Midwest and California 6 Union workers average 10 30 higher pay than non union in the United States after controlling for individual job and labor market characteristics 7 Although much smaller compared to their peak membership in the 1950s American unions remain a political factor both through mobilization of their own memberships and through coalitions with like minded activist organizations around issues such as immigrant rights environmental protections trade policy health care and living wage campaigns 8 Of special concern are efforts by cities and states to reduce the pension obligations owed to unionized workers who retire in the future 9 Republicans elected with Tea Party support in 2010 most notably former Governor Scott Walker of Wisconsin have launched major efforts against public sector unions due in part to state government pension obligations along with the allegation that the unions are too powerful 10 11 The academic literature shows substantial evidence that labor unions reduce economic inequality 12 13 Research suggests that rising income inequality in the United States is partially attributable to the decline of the labor movement and union membership 14 15 16 1 and that this is not only a correlation 17 Research has also found that unions can harm profitability employment and business growth rates 18 19 Contents 1 History 1 1 Post WWII 2 Labor unions in the 21st century 2 1 Labor negotiations 2 2 Membership 2 3 Labor education programs 2 4 Jurisdiction 2 5 Labor environment coalitions 2 6 Public opinion 3 Possible causes of drop in membership 3 1 Global trends 3 2 Popularity 3 3 Polls of public opinion and labor unions 3 4 Institutional environments 3 5 Labor legislation 3 6 Economic globalization 3 7 Employer strategies 3 8 Union responses to globalization 3 8 1 Transnational labor regulation 4 Impact 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory editMain article Labor history of the United States nbsp Knights of Labor s seal An injury to one is a concern to all Unions began forming in the mid 19th century in response to the social and economic impact of the Industrial Revolution National labor unions began to form in the post Civil War Era The Knights of Labor emerged as a major force in the late 1880s but it collapsed because of poor organization lack of effective leadership disagreement over goals and strong opposition from employers and government forces The American Federation of Labor founded in 1886 and led by Samuel Gompers until his death in 1924 proved much more durable It arose as a loose coalition of various local unions It helped coordinate and support strikes and eventually became a major player in national politics usually on the side of the Democrats American labor unions benefited greatly from the New Deal policies of Franklin Delano Roosevelt in the 1930s The Wagner Act in particular legally protected the right of unions to organize Unions from this point developed increasingly closer ties to the Democratic Party and are considered a backbone element of the New Deal Coalition Post WWII edit nbsp Political cartoon showing organized labor marching towards progress while a shortsighted employer tries to stop labor 1913 Pro business conservatives gained control of Congress in 1946 and in 1947 passed the Taft Hartley Act drafted by Senator Robert A Taft President Truman vetoed it but the Conservative coalition overrode the veto The veto override had considerable Democratic support including 106 out of 177 Democrats in the House and 20 out of 42 Democrats in the Senate 20 The law which is still in effect banned union contributions to political candidates restricted the power of unions to call strikes that threatened national security and forced the expulsion of Communist union leaders the Supreme Court found the anti communist provision to be unconstitutional and it is no longer in force The unions campaigned vigorously for years to repeal the law but failed During the late 1950s the Landrum Griffin Act of 1959 passed in the wake of Congressional investigations of corruption and undemocratic internal politics in the Teamsters and other unions 21 22 In 1955 the two largest labor organizations the AFL and CIO merged ending a division of over 20 years AFL President George Meany became President of the new AFL CIO and AFL Secretary Treasurer William Schnitzler became AFL CIO Secretary Treasurer The draft constitution was primarily written by AFL Vice President Matthew Woll and CIO General Counsel Arthur Goldberg while the joint policy statements were written by Woll CIO Secretary Treasurer James Carey CIO vice presidents David McDonald and Joseph Curran Brotherhood of Railway Clerks President George Harrison and Illinois AFL CIO President Reuben Soderstrom 23 The percentage of workers belonging to a union or density in the United States peaked in 1954 at almost 35 and the total number of union members peaked in 1979 at an estimated 21 0 million 24 25 Membership has declined since with private sector union membership beginning a steady decline that continues into the 2010s but the membership of public sector unions grew steadily 25 nbsp Labor union voting by federal workers at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory 1948 After 1960 public sector unions grew rapidly and secured good wages and high pensions for their members While manufacturing and farming steadily declined state and local government employment quadrupled from 4 million workers in 1950 to 12 million in 1976 and 16 6 million in 2009 26 Adding in the 3 7 million federal civilian employees in 2010 8 4 million government workers were represented by unions 27 including 31 of federal workers 35 of state workers and 46 of local workers 28 By the 1970s a rapidly increasing flow of imports such as automobiles steel and electronics from Germany and Japan and clothing and shoes from Asia undercut American producers 29 By the 1980s there was a large scale shift in employment with fewer workers in high wage sectors and more in the low wage sectors 30 Many companies closed or moved factories to Southern states where unions were weak 31 countered the threat of a strike by threatening to close or move a plant 32 or moved their factories offshore to low wage countries 33 The number of major strikes and lockouts fell by 97 from 381 in 1970 to 187 in 1980 to only 11 in 2010 32 34 On the political front the shrinking unions lost influence in the Democratic Party and pro Union liberal Republicans faded away 35 Union membership among workers in private industry shrank dramatically though after 1970 there was growth in employees unions of federal state and local governments 36 37 The intellectual mood in the 1970s and 1980s favored deregulation and free competition 38 Numerous industries were deregulated including airlines trucking railroads and telephones over the objections of the unions involved 39 The climax came when President Ronald Reagan a former union president broke the illegal 40 Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization PATCO strike in 1981 dealing a major blow to unions 34 41 Republicans began to push through legislative blueprints to curb the power of public employee unions as well as eliminate business regulations 33 42 43 Labor unions in the 21st century editSee also US labor law and List of trade unions in the United States nbsp Union members rally to reject union busting in New Orleans 2019 Today most labor unions or trade unions in the United States are members of one of two larger umbrella organizations the American Federation of Labor Congress of Industrial Organizations AFL CIO or the Strategic Organizing Center SOC which split from the AFL CIO in 2005 2006 44 Both organizations advocate policies and legislation favorable to workers in the United States and Canada and take an active role in politics favoring the Democratic party but not exclusively so The AFL CIO is especially concerned with global trade and economic issues Private sector unions are regulated by the National Labor Relations Act NLRA passed in 1935 and amended since then The law is overseen by the National Labor Relations Board NLRB an independent federal agency Public sector unions are regulated partly by federal and partly by state laws In general they have shown robust growth rates because wages and working conditions are set through negotiations with elected local and state officials To join a traditional labor union workers must either be given voluntary recognition from their employer or have a majority of workers in a bargaining unit vote for union representation citation needed In either case the government must then certify the newly formed union citation needed Other forms of unionism include minority unionism solidarity unionism and the practices of organizations such as the Industrial Workers of the World which do not always follow traditional organizational models Public sector worker unions are governed by labor laws and labor boards in each of the 50 states Northern states typically model their laws and boards after the NLRA and the NLRB In other states public workers have no right to establish a union as a legal entity About 40 of public employees in the USA do not have the right to organize a legally established union 45 46 A review conducted by the federal government on pay scale shows that employees in a labor union earn up to 33 more income than their nonunion counterparts as well as having more job security and safer and higher quality work conditions 47 The median weekly income for union workers was 973 in 2014 compared with 763 for nonunion workers 1 New media organizations and later traditional newspapers led a wave of unionization since 2015 spurred by losses during the Great Recession and start up layoffs NewsGuild and Writers Guild of America won many of these efforts including 5 000 journalists across 90 organizations 48 Labor negotiations edit Once the union won the support of a majority of the bargaining unit and is certified in a workplace it has the sole authority to negotiate the conditions of employment Under the NLRA employees can also if there is no majority support form a minority union which represents the rights of only those members who choose to join 49 Businesses however do not have to recognize the minority union as a collective bargaining agent for its members and therefore the minority union s power is limited 50 This minority model was once widely used but was discarded when unions began to consistently win majority support Unions are beginning to revisit the members only model of unionism because of new changes to labor law which unions view as curbing workers ability to organize 51 The employer and the union write the terms and conditions of employment in a legally binding contract When disputes arise over the contract most contracts call for the parties to resolve their differences through a grievance process to see if the dispute can be mutually resolved If the union and the employer still cannot settle the matter either party can choose to send the dispute to arbitration where the case is argued before a neutral third party nbsp Worker slogan used during the 2011 Wisconsin protestsRight to work statutes forbid unions from negotiating union shops and agency shops Thus while unions do exist in right to work states they are typically weaker Members of labor unions enjoy Weingarten Rights If management questions the union member on a matter that may lead to discipline or other changes in working conditions union members can request representation by a union representative Weingarten Rights are named for the first Supreme Court decision to recognize those rights 52 The NLRA goes farther in protecting the right of workers to organize unions It protects the right of workers to engage in any concerted activity for mutual aid or protection Thus no union connection is needed Concerted activity in its inception involves only a speaker and a listener for such activity is an indispensable preliminary step to employee self organization 53 Unions are currently advocating new federal legislation the Employee Free Choice Act EFCA that would allow workers to elect union representation by simply signing a support card card check The current process established by federal law requires at least 30 of employees to sign cards for the union then wait 45 to 90 days for a federal official to conduct a secret ballot election in which a simple majority of the employees must vote for the union in order to obligate the employer to bargain Unions report that under the present system many employers use the 45 to 90 day period to conduct anti union campaigns Some opponents of this legislation fear that removing secret balloting from the process will lead to the intimidation and coercion of workers on behalf of the unions During the 2008 elections the Employee Free Choice Act had widespread support of many legislators in the House and Senate and of the President Since then support for the card check provisions of the EFCA subsided substantially Membership edit See also Union affiliation by U S state nbsp of employed US workers with union membership Source OECD Data Trade Union DatasetUnion membership had been declining in the US since 1954 and since 1967 as union membership rates decreased middle class the middle class share of aggregate income shrank correspondingly 54 In 2007 the labor department reported the first increase in union memberships in 25 years and the largest increase since 1979 Most of the recent gains in union membership have been in the service sector while the number of unionized employees in the manufacturing sector has declined Most of the gains in the service sector have come in West Coast states like California where union membership is now at 16 7 compared with a national average of about 12 1 55 Historically the rapid growth of public employee unions since the 1960s has served to mask an even more dramatic decline in private sector union membership At the apex of union density in the 1940s only about 9 8 of public employees were represented by unions while 33 9 of private non agricultural workers had such representation In this decade those proportions have essentially reversed with 36 of public workers being represented by unions while private sector union density had plummeted to around 7 The US Bureau of Labor Statistics most recent survey indicates that union membership in the US has risen to 12 4 of all workers from 12 1 in 2007 For a short period private sector union membership rebounded increasing from 7 5 in 2007 to 7 6 in 2008 1 However that trend has since reversed In 2013 there were 14 5 million members in the U S compared with 17 7 million in 1983 In 2013 the percentage of workers belonging to a union was 11 3 compared to 20 1 in 1983 The rate for the private sector was 6 4 and for the public sector 35 3 56 In 2023 the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that Trade Union Membership hit an all time low in the U S dropping from 10 3 to 10 1 57 58 59 Between 2005 and 2014 the National Labor Relations Board recorded 18 577 labor union representation elections in 11 086 of these elections 60 percent the majority of workers voted for union representation Most of the elections 15 517 were triggered by employee petitions for representation of which unions won 9 933 Less common were elections caused by employee petitions for decertification 2 792 of which unions won 1 070 and employer filed petitions for either representation or decertification 268 of which unions won 85 60 61 Labor education programs edit nbsp Union members protest against another government shutdown 2019 In the US labor education programs such as the Harvard Trade Union Program 62 created in 1942 by Harvard University professor John Thomas Dunlop sought to educate union members to deal with important contemporary workplace and labor law issues of the day The Harvard Trade Union Program is currently part of a broader initiative at Harvard Law School called the Labor and Worklife Program 63 that deals with a wide variety of labor and employment issues from union pension investment funds to the effects of nanotechnology on labor markets and the workplace Cornell University is known to be one of the leading centers for labor education in the world establishing the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations in 1945 The school s mission is to prepare leaders inform national and international employment and labor policy and improve working lives through undergraduate and graduate education The school publishes the Industrial and Labor Relations Review and had Frances Perkins on its faculty The school has six academic departments Economics Human Resource Management International and Comparative Labor Labor Relations Organizational Behavior and Social Statistics Classes include Politics of the Global North and Economic Analysis of the University 64 65 Jurisdiction edit Labor unions use the term jurisdiction to refer to their claims to represent workers who perform a certain type of work and the right of their members to perform such work For example the work of unloading containerized cargo at United States ports which the International Longshoremen s Association the International Longshore and Warehouse Union and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters have claimed rightfully should be assigned to workers they represent A jurisdictional strike is a concerted refusal to work undertaken by a union to assert its members right to such job assignments and to protest the assignment of disputed work to members of another union or to unorganized workers Jurisdictional strikes occur most frequently in the United States in the construction industry 66 Unions also use jurisdiction to refer to the geographical boundaries of their operations as in those cases in which a national or international union allocates the right to represent workers among different local unions based on the place of those workers employment either along geographical lines or by adopting the boundaries between political jurisdictions 66 Labor environment coalitions edit To help counter their steady decline in power in the 1980s labor unions began to form coalitions locally nationally and globally with religious groups social movements politicians and sometimes employers 67 There was a general shift away from specific interest group advocacy and towards large scale pro democracy movements 67 Coalitions between labor unions and environmental groups are prominent in interest areas of global trade and health 67 The unification was unique given the two sides rocky history and notable differences Unions are very hierarchical and prioritize jobs with typically working class members while environmental groups tend to consist of middle class and white collar members and focus primarily on issues related to climate and the environment 25 Tensions arose in the past when environmental groups pushed for environmental protection regulations without considering the effects on jobs or the side effects on worker safety unintentionally antagonizing unions 25 Labor unions would sometimes side with employers even though employers are often seen as antithetical to unionization since no employers mean no jobs 68 Labor unions have sometimes worked against environmental groups when environmental activism was seen as limiting to economic growth 25 This antagonization was further encouraged by employers in a politically motivated strategy referred to as job blackmail and has been effective in pitting the movements against each other 25 Labor unions and environmental groups first began to collaborate internationally when the Reagan administration in the 1980s launched attacks on environmental regulations around the same time that they fired thousands of striking air traffic control employees 67 Public opinion edit Although not as overwhelmingly supportive as it was from the 1930s through the early 1960s a clear majority of the American public approves of labor unions The Gallup organization has tracked public opinion of unions since 1936 when it found that 72 percent approved of unions The overwhelming approval declined in the late 1960s but except for one poll in 2009 in which the unions received a favorable rating by only 48 percent of those interviewed majorities have always supported labor unions A Gallup Poll released August 2018 showed 62 of respondents approving unions the highest level in over a decade Disapproval of unions was expressed by 32 69 They polled opinion again in August 2022 finding that approval had risen to 71 the highest positive opinion since the year 1965 and that approval had been consistently rising since 2016 where it was found to be 56 70 On the question of whether or not unions should have more influence or less influence Gallup has found the public consistently split since Gallup first posed the question in 2000 with no majority favoring either more influence or less influence In August 2018 39 percent wanted unions to have more influence 29 percent less influence with 26 percent wanting the influence of labor unions to remain about the same 71 A Pew Research Center poll from 2009 to 2010 found a drop in labor union support in the midst of The Great Recession 72 sitting at 41 favorable and 40 unfavorable In 2018 union support rose to 55 favorable with just 33 unfavorable 73 Despite this union membership had continued to fall 74 Possible causes of drop in membership editThis section needs to be updated The reason given is This section cites sources from the Great Recession and needs updating Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information April 2020 nbsp As union membership declined income inequality rose 75 The US does not require employee representatives on boards of directors or elected work councils 76 Although most industrialized countries have seen a drop in unionization rates the drop in union density the unionized proportion of the working population has been more significant in the United States than elsewhere 14 Global trends edit nbsp Labor union membership by country nbsp Hours Worked Compared to Earnings Per Week OECD The US Bureau of Labor Statistics surveyed the histories of union membership rates in industrialized countries from 1970 to 2003 and found that of 20 advanced economies which had union density statistics going back to 1970 16 of them had experienced drops in union density from 1970 to 2003 Over the same period during which union density in the US declined from 23 5 percent to 12 4 percent some countries saw even steeper drops Australian unionization fell from 50 2 percent in 1970 to 22 9 percent in 2003 in New Zealand it dropped from 55 2 percent to 22 1 percent and in Austria union participation fell from 62 8 percent down to 35 4 percent All the English speaking countries studied saw union membership decline to some degree In the United Kingdom union participation fell from 44 8 percent in 1970 to 29 3 percent in 2003 In Ireland the decline was from 53 7 percent down to 35 3 percent Canada had one of the smallest declines over the period going from 31 6 percent in 1970 to 28 4 percent in 2003 Most of the countries studied started in 1970 with higher participation rates than the US but France which in 1970 had a union participation rate of 21 7 percent by 2003 had fallen to 8 3 percent The remaining four countries which had gained in union density were Finland Sweden Denmark and Belgium 77 Popularity edit Public approval of unions climbed during the 1980s much as it did in other industrialized nations 78 but declined to below 50 for the first time in 2009 during the Great Recession It is not clear if this is a long term trend or a function of a high unemployment rate which historically correlates with lower public approval of labor unions 79 One explanation for loss of public support is simply the lack of union power or critical mass No longer do a sizable percentage of American workers belong to unions or have family members who do Unions no longer carry the threat effect the power of unions to raise wages of non union shops by virtue of the threat of unions to organize those shops 79 Polls of public opinion and labor unions edit nbsp A historical comparison of union membership as a percentage of all workers and union support in the U S A New York Times CBS Poll found that 60 of Americans opposed restricting collective bargaining while 33 were for it The poll also found that 56 of Americans opposed reducing pay of public employees compared to the 37 who approved The details of the poll also stated that 26 of those surveyed thought pay and benefits for public employees were too high 25 thought too low and 36 thought about right Mark Tapscott of the Washington Examiner criticized the poll accusing it of over sampling union and public employee households 80 A Gallup poll released on March 9 2011 showed that Americans were more likely to support limiting the collective bargaining powers of state employee unions to balance a state s budget 49 than disapprove of such a measure 45 while 6 had no opinion 66 of Republicans approved of such a measure as did 51 of independents Only 31 of Democrats approved 81 A Gallup poll released on March 11 2011 showed that nationwide Americans were more likely to give unions a negative word or phrase when describing them 38 than a positive word or phrase 34 17 were neutral and 12 didn t know Republicans were much more likely to say a negative term 58 than Democrats 19 Democrats were much more likely to say a positive term 49 than Republicans 18 82 A nationwide Gallup poll margin of error 4 released on April 1 2011 83 showed the following When asked if they supported the labor unions or the governors in state disputes 48 said they supported the unions 39 said the governors 4 said neither and 9 had no opinion Women supported the governors much less than men 45 of men said they supported the governors while 46 said they supported the unions This compares to only 33 of women who said they supported the governors and 50 who said they supported the unions All areas of the US East Midwest South West were more likely to support unions than the governors The largest gap being in the East with 35 supporting the governors and 52 supporting the unions and the smallest gap being in the West with 41 supporting the governors and 44 the unions 18 to 34 year olds were much more likely to support unions than those over 34 years of age Only 27 of 18 to 34 year olds supported the governors while 61 supported the unions Americans ages 35 to 54 slightly supported the unions more than governors with 40 supporting the governors and 43 the unions Americans 55 and older were tied when asked with 45 supporting the governors and 45 the unions Republicans were much more likely to support the governors when asked with 65 supporting the governors and 25 the unions Independents slightly supported unions more with 40 supporting the governors and 45 the unions Democrats were overwhelmingly in support of the unions 70 of Democrats supported the unions while only 19 supported the governors Those who said they were following the situation not too closely or not at all supported the unions over governors with a 14 point 45 to 31 margin Those who said they were following the situation somewhat closely supported the unions over governors by a 52 41 margin Those who said that they were following the situation very closely were only slightly more likely to support the unions over the governors with a 49 48 margin nbsp Unions and workers protesting together for higher wages 2015 A nationwide Gallup poll released on August 31 2011 revealed the following 84 52 of Americans approved of labor unions unchanged from 2010 78 of Democrats approved of labor unions up from 71 in 2010 52 of Independents approved of labor unions up from 49 in 2010 26 of Republicans approved of labor unions down from 34 in 2010 A nationwide Gallup poll released on September 1 2011 revealed the following 85 55 of Americans believed that labor unions will become weaker in the United States as time goes by an all time high This compared to 22 who said their power would stay the same and 20 who said they would get stronger The majority of Republicans and Independents believed labor unions would further weaken by a 58 and 57 percentage margin respectively A plurality of Democrats believed the same at 46 42 of Americans want labor unions to have less influence tied for the all time high set in 2009 30 wanted more influence and 25 wanted the same amount of influence The majority of Republicans wanted labor unions to have less influence at 69 A plurality of Independents wanted labor unions to have less influence at 40 A plurality of Democrats wanted labor unions to have more influence at 45 The majority of Americans believed labor unions mostly helped members of unions by a 68 to 28 margin A plurality of Americans believed labor unions mostly helped the companies where workers are unionized by a 48 44 margin A plurality of Americans believed labor unions mostly helped state and local governments by a 47 45 margin A plurality of Americans believed labor unions mostly hurt the US economy in general by a 49 45 margin The majority of Americans believed labor unions mostly hurt workers who are not members of unions by a 56 34 margin Institutional environments edit A broad range of forces have been identified as potential contributors to the drop in union density across countries Sano and Williamson outline quantitative studies that assess the relevance of these factors across countries 86 The first relevant set of factors relate to the receptiveness of unions institutional environments For example the presence of a Ghent system where unions are responsible for the distribution of unemployment insurance and of centralized collective bargaining organized at a national or industry level as opposed to local or firm level have both been shown to give unions more bargaining power and to correlate positively to higher rates of union density 86 Unions have enjoyed higher rates of success in locations where they have greater access to the workplace as an organizing space as determined both by law and by employer acceptance and where they benefit from a corporatist relationship to the state and are thus allowed to participate more directly in the official governance structure Moreover the fluctuations of business cycles particularly the rise and fall of unemployment rates and inflation are also closely linked to changes in union density 86 Labor legislation edit nbsp Workers speak in support of the Workplace Democracy Act which makes it easier to unionize 2018 Labor lawyer Thomas Geoghegan attributes the drop to the long term effects of the 1947 Taft Hartley Act which slowed and then halted labor s growth and then over many decades enabled management to roll back labor s previous gains 87 First it ended organizing on the grand 1930s scale It outlawed mass picketing secondary strikes of neutral employers sit downs in short everything CIO founder John L Lewis did in the 1930s The second effect of Taft Hartley was subtler and slower working It was to hold up any new organizing at all even on a quiet low key scale For example Taft Hartley ended card checks Taft Hartley required hearings campaign periods secret ballot elections and sometimes more hearings before a union could be officially recognized It also allowed and even encouraged employers to threaten workers who want to organize Employers could hold captive meetings bring workers into the office and chew them out for thinking about the Union And Taft Hartley led to the union busting that started in the late 1960s and continues today It started when a new profession of labor consultants began to convince employers that they could violate the pro labor 1935 Wagner Act fire workers at will fire them deliberately for exercising their legal rights and nothing would happen The Wagner Act had never had any real sanctions So why hadn t employers been violating the Wagner Act all along Well at first in the 1930s and 1940s they tried and they got riots in the streets mass picketing secondary strikes etc But after Taft Hartley unions couldn t retaliate like this or they would end up with penalty fines and jail sentences 87 In general scholars debate the influence of politics in determining union strength in the US and other countries One argument is that political parties play an expected role in determining union strength with left wing governments generally promoting greater union density while others contest this finding by pointing out important counterexamples and explaining the reverse causality inherent in this relationship 88 Economic globalization edit More recently as unions have become increasingly concerned with the impacts of market integration on their well being scholars have begun to assess whether popular concerns about a global race to the bottom are reflected in cross country comparisons of union strength These scholars use foreign direct investment FDI and the size of a country s international trade as a percentage of its GDP to assess a country s relative degree of market integration These researchers typically find that globalization does affect union density but is dependent on other factors such as unions access to the workplace and the centralization of bargaining 89 Sano and Williamson argue that globalization s impact is conditional upon a country s labor history 90 In the United States in particular which has traditionally had relatively low levels of union density globalization did not appear to significantly affect union density Employer strategies edit nbsp Illegal union firing increased during the Reagan administration and has continued since 91 Studies focusing more narrowly on the U S labor movement corroborate the comparative findings about the importance of structural factors but tend to emphasize the effects of changing labor markets due to globalization to a greater extent Bronfenbrenner notes that changes in the economy such as increased global competition capital flight and the transitions from a manufacturing to a service economy and to a greater reliance on transitory and contingent workers accounts for only a third of the decline in union density 92 Bronfenbrenner claims that the federal government in the 1980s was largely responsible for giving employers the perception that they could engage in aggressive strategies to repress the formation of unions Richard Freeman also points to the role of repressive employer strategies in reducing unionization and highlights the way in which a state ideology of anti unionism tacitly accepted these strategies 78 Goldfield writes that the overall effects of globalization on unionization in the particular case of the United States may be understated in econometric studies on the subject 93 He writes that the threat of production shifts reduces unions bargaining power even if it does not eliminate them and also claims that most of the effects of globalization on labor s strength are indirect They are most present in change towards a neoliberal political context that has promoted the deregulation and privatization of some industries and accepted increased employer flexibility in labor markets Union responses to globalization edit nbsp Studies done by Kate Bronfenbrenner at Cornell University show the adverse effects of globalization towards unions due to illegal threats of firing 94 Regardless of the actual impact of market integration on union density or on workers themselves organized labor has been engaged in a variety of strategies to limit the agenda of globalization and to promote labor regulations in an international context Labor rights had failed to be included in international trade negotiations in Geneva in 1948 and in Tokyo in 1978 95 But they eventually were brought up by the US in the Uruguay Round in 1994 and were decidedly left to the jurisdiction of the International Labor Organization 95 Summers argues that this decision to shift all responsibility of labor rights to the ILO essentially extinguished the possibility of including labor standards in any meaningful way as the ILO lacks any enforceable mechanism to address instances of rights violations 95 It was around this time that US labor unions began to step in to advocate for rights in free trade negotiations In 1994 labor unions were one of the many groups protesting The North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA being negotiated at the time 96 Pro NAFTA advocates launched campaigns which claimed that NAFTA and other free trade deals would contribute to employment in the US 97 While this may be true Summers argues that US exports tend to be capital intensive while imports tend to be labor intensive and thus deals like NAFTA would further contribute to the trend of more jobs being lost than created 95 In the fight to preserve employment and fight against policies which would contribute to environmental damage the negotiations became a catalyst for the rise of coalition building across sectors namely between labor unions and environmentalist groups as well as across borders between Mexican US and Canadian advocacy groups 96 However Mayer has written that it was precisely unions opposition to NAFTA overall that jeopardized organized labor s ability to influence the debate on labor standards in a significant way 98 During Clinton s presidential campaign labor unions wanted NAFTA to include a side deal to provide for a kind of international social charter a set of standards that would be enforceable both in domestic courts and through international institutions Mickey Kantor then U S trade representative had strong ties to organized labor and believed that he could get unions to come along with the agreement particularly if they were given a strong voice in the negotiation process 98 When it became clear that Mexico would not stand for this kind of an agreement some critics from the labor movement would not settle for any viable alternatives In response part of the labor movement wanted to declare their open opposition to the agreement and to push for NAFTA s rejection in Congress 98 Ultimately the ambivalence of labor groups led those within the Administration who supported NAFTA to believe that strengthening NAFTA s labor side agreement the North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation NAALC too much would cost more votes among Republicans than it would garner among Democrats and would make it harder for the United States to elicit support from Mexico 99 Graubart writes that despite unions open disappointment with the outcome of this labor side negotiation labor activists including the AFL CIO have used the NAALC s citizen petition containing a unique cross border mechanism to highlight ongoing political campaigns and struggles in their home countries 100 101 He claims that despite the relative weakness of the legal provisions themselves the side agreement has served a legitimizing functioning giving certain social struggles a new kind of standing Kay argues that in the process of fighting NAFTA activists groups had gained a power to the power of mobilizing and creating transnational networks which ultimately helped them to defeat the Multilateral Agreements on Investment in 1998 as well as the Free Trade Agreement of the Americas in 2005 96 Transnational labor regulation edit Unions have recently been engaged in a developing field of transnational labor regulation embodied in corporate codes of conduct However O Brien cautions that unions have been only peripherally involved in this process and remain ambivalent about its potential effects 102 They worry that these codes could have legitimizing effects on companies that do not actually live up to good practices and that companies could use codes to excuse or distract attention from the repression of unions Braun and Gearhart note that although unions do participate in the structure of a number of these agreements their original interest in codes of conduct differed from the interests of human rights and other non governmental activists Unions believed that codes of conduct would be important first steps in creating written principles that a company would be compelled to comply with in later organizing contracts but did not foresee the establishment of monitoring systems such as the Fair Labor Association These authors point out that such organizations are motivated by power want to gain insider status politically and are accountable to a constituency that requires them to provide them with direct benefits 103 In contrast activists from the non governmental sector are motivated by ideals are free of accountability and gain legitimacy from being political outsiders Therefore the interests of unions are not likely to align well with the interests of those who draft and monitor corporate codes of conduct Arguing against the idea that high union wages necessarily make manufacturing uncompetitive in a globalized economy was labor lawyer Thomas Geoghegan Busting unions in the U S manner as the prime way of competing with China and other countries does not work It s no accident that the social democracies Sweden France and Germany which kept on paying high wages now have more industry than the U S or the UK T hat s what the U S and the UK did they smashed the unions in the belief that they had to compete on cost The result They quickly ended up wrecking their industrial base 104 Unions have made some attempts to organize across borders Eder observed that transnational organizing is not a new phenomenon but has been facilitated by technological change 105 Nevertheless he claimed that while unions pay lip service to global solidarity they still act largely in their national self interest He argued that unions in the global North are becoming increasingly depoliticized while those in the South grow politically and that global differentiation of production processes leads to divergent strategies and interests in different regions of the world These structural differences tend to hinder effective global solidarity However in light of the weakness of international labor Herod wrote that globalization of production need not be met by a globalization of union strategies in order to be contained Herod also pointed out that local strategies such as the United Auto Workers strike against General Motors in 1998 can sometimes effectively interrupt global production processes in ways that they could not before the advent of widespread market integration Thus workers need not be connected organizationally to others around the world to effectively influence the behavior of a transnational corporation 106 Impact editA 2018 study in the Economic History Review found that the rise of labor unions in the 1930s and 1940s was associated with a reduction in income inequality 107 A 2020 study found that congressional representatives were more responsive to the interests of the poor in districts with higher unionization rates 108 Another 2020 study found an association between state level adoption of parental leave legislation and labor union strength 109 A 2021 study in the ILR Review found that state union density was associated with a reduction in poverty in both unionized and non unionized households 110 According to sociologist Matthew Desmond of Princeton University the power of labor unions in the post war era till the late 1970s played a significant role in ensuring that an expanding US economy shared its bounty with the working class and mitigated labor exploitation making it a time when honest work delivered a solid paycheck He acknowledges however that racism attacks from corporate lobbyists who made deep inroads to both parties and a changing economy weakened unions and prevented the labor movement from ever realizing its full potential 111 The Hoover Institution think tank has asserted that the economic inequality argument made in favor of trade unions misfires on several fronts Those high union wages could not survive in the face of foreign competition or new nonunionized firms The only way a union can provide gains for its members is to extract some fraction of the profits that firms enjoy when they hold monopoly positions The think tank has also asserted that the decline of trade unions in the United States cannot drive widespread inequality for the entire population which is also affected by a rise in the knowledge economy as well as a general aging of the population 112 A 2020 study in the American Journal of Political Science suggested that when white people obtain union membership they become less racially resentful 113 Higher union density has been associated with lower suicide overdose deaths 114 Decreased unionization rates in the United States have been linked to an increase in occupational fatalities 115 Other research has found that unions can harm profitability employment and business growth rates 18 19 The outsourcing of labour from the United States to Asia Latin America and Africa has been partially driven by increasing costs of union partnership which gives other countries a comparative advantage in labour making it more efficient to perform labour intensive work there 116 The weakening of unions has been linked to more favorable electoral outcomes for the Republican Party 117 118 119 However Republican controlled states are less likely to adopt more restrictive labor policies when unions are strong in the state 120 See also editUnited States labor law Labor federation competition in the United States Immigration policies of American labor unions Union affiliation by U S state Public sector trade unions in the United States Police unions in the United StatesHistory Labor history of the United States Timeline of labor unions in the United States Commission on Industrial Relations List of worker deaths in United States labor disputes Union violence in the United StatesInternational Industrial Workers of the World International comparisons of labor unions New Zealand Labour PartyGeneral List of strikes Opposition to trade unionsNotes edit a b c Union Members Summary Bureau of Labor Statistics Retrieved October 1 2022 a b c UNION MEMBERS 2022 PDF Bureau of Labor Statistics January 19 2023 The union membership rate the percent of wage and salary workers who were members of unions was 10 1 percent in 2022 down from 10 3 percent in 2021 The union membership rate of public sector workers 33 1 percent continued to be more than five times higher than the rate of private sector workers 6 0 percent a b c Rosalsky Greg February 28 2023 You may have heard of the union boom The numbers tell a different story NPR Headline writers began declaring things like Employees everywhere are organizing and that the United States was seeing a union boom In September the White House asserted Organized labor appears to be having a moment However the Bureau of Labor Statistics recently released its union data for 2022 And their data shows that far from a resurgence the share of American workers in a union has continued to decline Last year the union membership rate fell by 0 2 percentage points to 10 1 the lowest on record See Trade Union Density OECD StatExtracts Retrieved January 1 2017 See also Trade union Prevalence worldwide Not With a Bang But a Whimper The Long Slow Death Spiral of America s Labor Movement Richard Yeselson The New Republic June 6 2012 8 31 2004 Union Membership Trends in the United States Gerald Mayer Congressional Research Service Aug 31 2004 Mayer Brian May 2009 Cross Movement Coalition Formation Bridging the Labor Environment Divide Sociological Inquiry 79 2 219 239 doi 10 1111 j 1475 682X 2009 00286 x Alicia H Munnell 2012 State and Local Pensions What Now Brookings Institution Press pp 4 5 ISBN 978 0815724131 Nelson Lichtenstein Can This Election Save the Unions Dissent Summer 2012 Jason Stein and Patrick Marley More than They Bargained For Scott Walker Unions and the Fight for Wisconsin 2013 is favorable toward Walker who beat off a recall challenge and was easily reelected in 2014 Ahlquist John S 2017 Labor Unions Political Representation and Economic Inequality Annual Review of Political Science 20 1 409 432 doi 10 1146 annurev polisci 051215 023225 Farber Henry S Herbst Daniel Kuziemko Ilyana Naidu Suresh 2021 Unions and Inequality over the Twentieth Century New Evidence from Survey Data The Quarterly Journal of Economics 136 3 1325 1385 doi 10 1093 qje qjab012 ISSN 0033 5533 a b Doree Armstrong February 12 2014 Jake Rosenfeld explores the sharp decline of union membership influence UW Today Retrieved December 19 2014 See also Jake Rosenfeld 2014 What Unions No Longer Do Harvard University Press ISBN 0674725115 Keith Naughton Lynn Doan and Jeffrey Green February 20 2015 As the Rich Get Richer Unions Are Poised for Comeback Bloomberg Retrieved February 20 2015 A 2011 study drew a link between the decline in union membership since 1973 and expanding wage disparity Those trends have since continued said Bruce Western a professor of sociology at Harvard University who co authored the study Jaumotte Florence Osorio Buitron Caroline March 1 2015 Power from the People The decline in unionization in recent decades has fed the rise in incomes at the top International Monetary Fund Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved May 17 2019 Michael Hiltzik March 25 2015 IMF agrees Decline of union power has increased income inequality Los Angeles Times Retrieved March 26 2015 The IMF analysis suggests these trend lines aren t merely correlations but the first is caused at least partially by the second Indeed the paper says that roughly half the increase in income inequality in advanced economies is driven by deunionization a b Hirsch Barry T What do unions do for economic performance Journal of Labor Research 25 no 3 2004 415 455 a b Vedder Richard and Lowell Gallaway The economic effects of labor unions revisited Journal of labor research 23 no 1 2002 105 130 Benjamin C Waterhouse Lobbying in America Princeton University Press 2013 53 William H Holley et al Jr 2011 The Labor Relations Process 10th ed Cengage Learning p 85 ISBN 978 0538481984 David Scott Witwer 2003 Corruption and Reform in the Teamsters Union University of Illinois Press p 131ff ISBN 9780252028250 Soderstrom Carl Soderstrom Robert Stevens Chris Burt Andrew 2018 Forty Gavels The Life of Reuben Soderstrom and the Illinois AFL CIO 3 Peoria IL CWS Publishing pp 95 96 ISBN 978 0998257532 American unions membership declines as public support fluctuates Pew Research Center Retrieved April 26 2021 a b c d e f Mayer Brian 2009 Cross Movement Coalition Formation Bridging the Labor Environment Divide Sociological Inquiry 79 2 219 239 doi 10 1111 j 1475 682X 2009 00286 x ISSN 1475 682X U S Census Bureau Census Bureau Reports State and Local Government Employment Remains at 16 6 Million press release Aug 10 2010 Archived August 11 2014 at the Wayback Machine This includes some people who are covered by union contracts but are not themselves members Bureau of Labor Statistics Table 3 Union affiliation of employed wage and salary workers by occupation and industry Susan Margaret Collins 1998 Imports Exports and the American Worker Brookings Institution Press pp 288 90 ISBN 0815714998 Frank Levy Larry Mishel and Jared Bernstein 1996 Running in Place Recent Trends in U S Living Standards DIANE Publishing pp 53 56 ISBN 9780788145735 James Charles Cobb and William Whitney Stueck 2005 Globalization and the American South U of Georgia Press p 41 ISBN 9780820326474 a b U S Census Bureau Statistical Abstract of the United States 2012 2011 p 428 table 663 PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 20 2011 Retrieved December 12 2017 a b Carter A Wilson 2013 Public Policy Continuity and Change Second Edition Waveland Press pp 256 57 ISBN 9781478610625 a b Aaron Brenner et al 2011 The Encyclopedia of Strikes in American History M E Sharpe pp 234 35 ISBN 9780765626455 Nicol C Rae The Decline and Fall of the Liberal Republicans From 1952 to the Present 1989 James T Bennett and Bruce E Kaufman 2002 The Future of Private Sector Unionism in the United States M E Sharpe pp 373 78 ISBN 9780765608529 Robert H Zieger and Gilbert J Gall American Workers American Unions The Twentieth Century 3rd ed 2002 Lawrence Richards Union Free America Workers and Antiunion Culture 2010 Martha Derthick and Paul J Quirk The Politics of Deregulation 1985 p 218 Derthick and Quirk The Politics of Deregulation 1985 pp vii 11 104 137 WCP The Downward Path We ve Trod Reflections on an Ominous Anniversary Georgetown University Kalmanovitz Initiative for Labor and the Working Poor August 5 2021 Retrieved August 5 2021 Michael Round Grounded Reagan and the PATCO Crash 1999 Theda Skocpol Vanessa Williamson 2012 The Tea Party and the Remaking of Republican Conservatism Oxford U P p 192 ISBN 9780199832637 Richard B Freeman and Eunice Han The war against public sector collective bargaining in the US Journal of Industrial Relations 2012 54 3 pp 386 408 Edsall Thomas July 26 2005 Two Top Unions Split From AFL CIO Washington Post Retrieved April 6 2021 CQ Public Employee Unions 2011 online American Federation of Government Employees AFGE Local 704 More FAQs 2015 Schultz Duane P Schultz Sydney Ellen 2010 Psychology and work today an introduction to industrial and organizational psychology 10th ed Upper Saddle River N J Prentice Hall pp 271 272 ISBN 978 0205683581 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Smith Ben May 4 2020 How a New Breed of Union Activists Is Changing the Rules and Newsrooms The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Morris Charles J Charles J Morris on Labor Relations Retrieved September 25 2018 Moshe Mavit Leigh Anne Schriever October 21 2015 With Traditional Unions on the Decline Can Members Only Unions Breathe Life Back Into Labor In These Times Elk Mike April 28 2017 Can unions rebuild the labor movement in the US south The Guardian Retrieved September 25 2018 NLRB v J Weingarten Inc 420 U S 251 1975 Tate amp Renner Attorneys at Law Root Carlin Inc 92 NLRB 1313 27 LRRM 1235 citing NLRB v City Yellow Cab Co 6th Cir 1965 344 F 2d 575 582 www workplacefairness org Madland Walter and Bunker As Union Membership Rates Decrease Middle Class Incomes Shrink AFL CIO May 24 2013 Bureau of Labor Statistics January 25 2008 Union members in 2007 PDF Washington D C U S Department of Labor Greenhouse Steven January 26 2008 Union membership sees biggest rise since 83 The New York Times p A11 Freeman Sholnn January 26 2008 Union membership up slightly in 2007 Growth was biggest in Western states Midwest rolls shrank with job losses The Washington Post p D2 Bureau of Labor Statistics Union Membership Summary Jan 24 2014 Union membership dropped to record low in 2022 Politico January 19 2023 Singh Kanishka January 19 2023 U S Union membership rate falls to all time low despite organizing efforts data shows Reuters Union Membership The Washington Post January 19 2023 subscription required Representation petitions National Labor Relations Board accessed October 10 2015 Decertification petitions National Labor Relations Board accessed October 10 2015 Labor and Worklife Program Law harvard edu Retrieved October 14 2017 Labor and Worklife Program Law harvard edu Retrieved October 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2007 Kate Bronfenbrenner We ll Close The Multinational Monitor March 1997 based on the study she directed Final Report The Effects of Plant Closing or Threat of Plant Closing on the Right of Workers to Organize a b c d Summers Clyde April 1 2001 The Battle in Seattle Free Trade Labor Rights and Societal Values University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law 22 1 61 ISSN 1086 7872 a b c Kay Tamara May 27 2015 New challenges new alliances union politicization in a post NAFTA era Labor History 56 3 246 269 doi 10 1080 0023656X 2015 1042760 ISSN 0023 656X S2CID 153481252 Rupert Mark E December 1 1995 Re Politicizing the global economy Liberal common sense and ideological struggle in the US NAFTA debate Review of International Political Economy 2 4 658 692 doi 10 1080 09692299508434337 ISSN 0969 2290 a b c CIAO Ciaonet org Retrieved October 14 2017 Cameron Maxwell A and Brian W Tomlin The Making of NAFTA How the Deal was Done Ithaca NY Cornell University Press 2000 Compa Lance A January 1 2001 NAFTA s Labour Side Agreement and International Labour Solidarity Cornell University eCommons Graubart Jonathan Legalizing Transnational Activism The Struggle to Gain Social Change from NAFTA s Citizen Petitions Pennsylvania State University Press 2008 O Brien Robert The varied paths to minimum global labour standards Global Unions Theory and Strategies of organized labour in the global political economy edited by Jeffrey Harrod and Robert O Brien Routledge 2002 Rainer Braun and Judy Gearhart Who should code your conduct Trade union and NGO differences in the fight for workers rights Development in Practice 14 1 2 2004 183 196 Were You Born On The Wrong Continent by Thomas Geoghegan Eder Mine The constraints on labour internationalism contradictions and prospects in Global Unions Theory and Strategies of Organized Labour in the Global Political Economy ed Harrod Jeffrey and Robert O Brien Routledge 2002 Herod Andrew Organizing globally organizing locally union spatial strategy in a global economy in Global Unions Theory and Strategies of Organized labour in the Global Political Economy ed Harrod Jeffrey and Robert O Brien Routledge 2002 Collins William J Niemesh Gregory T 2019 Unions and the Great Compression of wage inequality in the US at mid century evidence from local labour markets The Economic History Review 72 2 691 715 doi 10 1111 ehr 12744 ISSN 1468 0289 Becher Michael Stegmueller Daniel 2020 Reducing Unequal Representation The Impact of Labor Unions on Legislative Responsiveness in the U S Congress Perspectives on Politics 19 92 109 doi 10 1017 S153759272000208X ISSN 1537 5927 Engeman Cassandra 2020 When Do Unions Matter to Social Policy Organized Labor and Leave Legislation in US States Social Forces 99 4 1745 1771 doi 10 1093 sf soaa074 Event history analysis of state level leave policy adoption from 1983 to 2016 shows that union institutional strength particularly in the public sector is positively associated with the timing of leave policy adoption VanHeuvelen Tom Brady David 2021 Labor Unions and American Poverty ILR Review 75 4 891 917 doi 10 1177 00197939211014855 hdl 10419 240906 ISSN 0019 7939 S2CID 236337491 Desmond Matthew 2023 Poverty by America Crown Publishing Group pp 57 59 172 ISBN 9780593239919 The Decline Of Unions Is Good News Hoover Institution Retrieved August 14 2023 Frymer Paul Grumbach Jacob M 2020 Labor Unions and White Racial Politics American Journal of Political Science 65 225 240 doi 10 1111 ajps 12537 ISSN 1540 5907 S2CID 221245953 Eisenberg Guyot Jerzy Mooney Stephen J Hagopian Amy Barrington Wendy E Hajat Anjum 2020 Solidarity and disparity Declining labor union density and changing racial and educational mortality inequities in the United States American Journal of Industrial Medicine 63 3 218 231 doi 10 1002 ajim 23081 ISSN 1097 0274 PMC 7293351 PMID 31845387 Results Overall a 10 increase in union density was associated with a 17 relative decrease in overdose suicide mortality 95 confidence interval CI 0 70 0 98 or 5 7 lives saved per 100 000 person years 95 CI 10 7 0 7 Union density s absolute lives saved effects on overdose suicide mortality were stronger for men than women but its relative effects were similar across genders Union density had little effect on all cause mortality overall or across subgroups and modeling suggested union density increases would not affect mortality inequities Conclusions Declining union density as operationalized in this study may not explain all cause mortality inequities although increases in union density may reduce overdose suicide mortality Zoorob Michael October 1 2018 Does right to work imperil the right to health The effect of labour unions on workplace fatalities Occupational and Environmental Medicine 75 10 736 738 doi 10 1136 oemed 2017 104747 ISSN 1351 0711 PMID 29898957 S2CID 49187014 Retrieved January 31 2022 The Local Average Treatment Effect of a 1 decline in unionisation attributable to RTW is about a 5 increase in the rate of occupational fatalities In total RTW laws have led to a 14 2 increase in occupational mortality through decreased unionisation Kramarz Francis October 19 2006 Outsourcing Unions and Wages Evidence from data matching imports firms and workers PDF Retrieved January 22 2007 Abdul Razzak Nour Prato Carlo Wolton Stephane October 1 2020 After Citizens United How outside spending shapes American democracy Electoral Studies 67 102190 doi 10 1016 j electstud 2020 102190 ISSN 0261 3794 Macdonald David June 25 2020 Labor Unions and White Democratic Partisanship Political Behavior 43 2 859 879 doi 10 1007 s11109 020 09624 3 ISSN 1573 6687 S2CID 220512676 Hertel Fernandez Alexander 2018 Policy Feedback as Political Weapon Conservative Advocacy and the Demobilization of the Public Sector Labor Movement Perspectives on Politics 16 2 364 379 doi 10 1017 S1537592717004236 ISSN 1537 5927 Bucci Laura C Jansa Joshua M 2020 Who passes restrictive labour policy A view from the States 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Walter P Reuther Selected Papers 1961 1955 presentBennett James T and Bruce E Kaufman What do unions do a twenty year perspective 2007 Dark Taylor E The Unions and the Democrats An Enduring Alliance 1999 Dine Philip State of the Unions How Labor Can Strengthen the Middle Class Improve Our Economy and Regain Political Influence 2007 Fantasia Rick and Kim Voss Hard Work Remaking the American Labor Movement 2004 Galenson Walter The American Labor Movement 1955 1995 1996 Goldberg Arthur J AFL CIO Labor United 1956 Leiter Robert D The Teamsters Union A Study of Its Economic Impact 1957 Lichtenstein Nelson Two Roads Forward for Labor The AFL CIO s New Agenda Dissent 61 1 2014 54 58 Online Lipset Seymour Martin ed Unions in Transition Entering the Second Century 1986 Mort Jo Ann ed Not Your Father s Union Movement Inside the AFL CIO 2002 Rosenfeld Jake What Unions No Longer Do Harvard University Press 2014 ISBN 0674725115 Yates Michael D Why Unions Matter 2009 External links editAFL CIO official website Change to Win Federation official website The Challenges of Today s Labor Unions The Cost of a Decline in Unions February 2015 Nicholas Kristof The New York Times The incredible decline of American unions in one animated map February 2015 Ana Swanson The Washington Post What Happened to Unions in the Midwest Feb 2015 Melanie Trottman and Eric Morath The Wall Street Journal Unions still matter April 2015 Sean McElwee Al Jazeera America Americans Don t Miss Manufacturing They Miss Unions FiveThirtyEight May 13 2016 The Economic Outlook for Millennials Is Bleak Now They re Unionizing in Record Numbers Mother Jones February 9 2018 Coronavirus fight Some US worker unions become more aggressive Al Jazeera May 1 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Labor unions in the United States amp oldid 1199735597, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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