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Lessons from America: Changes in the US Trade Union Movement
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 April 2001
Abstract
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R. M. Tillman and M. S. Cummings (eds.) The Transformation of US Unions: Voices, Visions and Strategies from the Grassroots, 1999, Boulder: Rienner, 1998, paper $22.50 vi+296 pp.
For much of the postwar period, the American trade union movement provided a largely negative model of organisation and strategy to British trade union activists. The practice of business unionism ceded workplace control to employers; the unions were frequently anti-democratic, anti-communist and repressive of any internal dissent; and these latter policies were replicated in relations with trade unions internationally, where the American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial Organisations (AFL-CIO) was widely regarded as an extension of American foreign policy.
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