| Description |
212 p. |
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02 64.63 GBP 00 S 53.86 20.0 64.63 10.77 GB xxk Palgrave Macmillan onix-pt |
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20100413 IP 20100916 GB xxk Palgrave Macmillan UK-WkNB |
| Note |
Electronic book text. |
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Originally published in: 2010. |
| Contents |
Industrial Relations after the Third Wave * Democratization and Socio-Economic Security * Labor Market Regulation and Industrial Conflict: An Empirical Baseline * Labor Market Regulation and Social Dialogue: A Qualitative Comparative Analysis * Protest and Social Dialogue in South Korea, 1987-2006 * Protest and Social Dialogue in Democratic Chile, 1988-2006 * Participation, Flexibility, and the Future of the Third Wave. |
| File Type |
Document |
| Summary |
This book explores how democratization has changed the material and political fortunes of workers in the new democracies of Europe, Latin America, and East Asia. |
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"Aleman's study is a state-of-the art contribution to labor studies and the literature on democratization. Analyzing labor in the global context of '3rd wave' democratization, he employs impressive methods, including cross-national statistical anlaysis, qualitative-comparative analysis (QCA), and case studies in a well-chosen comparison of Chile and South Korea, two of the great economic and political success stories of the last three decades. Aleman shows that variation in the extent to which social dialogue has been instituted in policy regimes explains levels of labor militance and worker welfare. The book, with important subject matter, careful reasoning, and obvious policy relevance, deserves to be widely read." - Steven Pfaff, Associate Professor, Sociology, and Director, Center for West European Studies, Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington "Aleman helps us understand why the 'Third Wave' of democracy has not delivered the economic goods that organized labor expected in many developing countries. With a series of cross-national quantitative analyses and two rich case studies of South Korea and Chile, he points to ways that economic pressures can constrain the impact of democratic inclusion: while democracy has provided opportunities for increased labor participation in bargaining, labor market deregulation has undercut workers' ability to achieve wage gains and job stability. This book will be of great interest to students of comparative labor politics, democratization, and industrial relations." - Matthew Carnes, Assistant Professor, Department of Government, Georgetown University "New democratic rights and protections do not always quiet down a country's labor movement. Sometimes they just open up new paths for militancy. In explaining why, Jose A. Aleman comes at the problem from a number of useful empirical directions, including neat case studies of Chile and South Korea. His global approach has helped him get it just right." - James M. Jasper, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York "In this innovative work, Jose A. Aleman offers a thorough and comprehensive examination of the interplay of labor, capital, and the state in new democracies. Aleman deftly combines and integrates quantitative cross-national analysis, systematic comparative analysis, and in-depth case studies to construct a compelling portrait of the challenges new democracies face." - Charles C. Ragin, Professor of Sociology and Political Science, University of Arizona. |
| System Details |
PDF. |
| Biography |
Jose Aleman is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Fordham University. |
| Misc. |
Tag for ezproxy |
| Subject |
Industrial relations -- East Asia.
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Industrial relations -- Latin America.
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Industrial relations -- Europe.
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Labour economics -- Europe -- Asia -- Latin America.
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Political structures: democracy -- Europe -- Asia -- Latin America.
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Economics.
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| ISBN |
9780230106284 : £64.63 |
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0230106285 : £64.63 |
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