Down but Not Out: Union Resurgence and Segmented Neocorporatism in Argentina (2003–2007)

The shift from state-led import-substitution industrialization to more market-oriented economic models often has the result of shrinking and demobilizing the labor movement. Yet, evidence from Argentina suggests that a subsequent resurgence of even a downsized labor movement may occur and furthermor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Politics & society 2007-09, Vol.35 (3), p.363-401
Hauptverfasser: Etchemendy, Sebastián, Collier, Ruth Berins
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container_title Politics & society
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creator Etchemendy, Sebastián
Collier, Ruth Berins
description The shift from state-led import-substitution industrialization to more market-oriented economic models often has the result of shrinking and demobilizing the labor movement. Yet, evidence from Argentina suggests that a subsequent resurgence of even a downsized labor movement may occur and furthermore that a type of “segmented neocorporatism” may be established in the new economic context. We argue that the establishment of this new form of interest intermediation is driven by economic and political factors that are both immediate and longer term. In addition to the short-term condition of the labor market and the political strategy of the government in power, of longer-term importance are structural and institutional conditions that derive from the earlier process of market reform, specifically the nature of sectoral shifts in the economy and the degree of labor law deregulation affecting the “associational power” of unions.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0032329207304318
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subjects Argentina
Corporatism
Deregulation
Economic Factors
Economic models
Economic reform
Employment policies
Industrialization
Labor law
Labor market
Labor Movements
Labor unions
Labour law
Labour movements
Law
Market economies
Neocorporatism
Political Factors
Political power
Power
Reforms
Trade liberalization
Trade unions
Workers' representation
title Down but Not Out: Union Resurgence and Segmented Neocorporatism in Argentina (2003–2007)
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