Exiting the Factory (Volume 2): Strikes and Class Formation beyond the Industrial Sector
Exiting the Factory (Volume 2): Strikes and Class Formation beyond the Industrial Sector
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Abstract
Karl Marx famously argued that the historical emergence of the working class as a collective actor resulted from acts of resistance against the continuous extension of the working day, which occurred in the context of the Industrial Revolution and was driven by capitalist competition. In an age where parts of the world experience sustained processes of deindustrialization, this raises the question of what happens to working classes when the factory gates are shut for good. It is possible to address this issue by resorting to strike research and focusing on the service and public sectors. Accordingly, the research question addressed in this book is this: What are the class effects of non-industrial strikes – or how far do they contribute to working-class formation? The author addresses it by taking three steps. First, he shows that the existing global labour studies literature insufficiently engages with class theory; second, he addresses this shortcoming by conceptualizing class and class formation from a critical-realist and materialist angle; and third, he conducts an incorporated comparison of non-industrial strike action around the globe in the age of the Great Crisis by (a) mapping 387 strikes in the service and public sectors from 56 countries and autonomous territories and (b) by zooming in on the railway strikes in Germany, the junior doctors’ strikes in Britain and the general strikes against austerity and the feminist general strikes in Spain.
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Front Matter
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Part I Strike Research from a Global Angle: Collective Action in Response to the Crisis of Neoliberalism
Alexander Gallas-
1
Beyond Methodological Fordism: The Case for Incorporated Comparisons
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2
A Catastrophic Disequilibrium: Neoliberal Capitalism in Crisis
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3
Shifting Conditions of Struggle: The Service and Public Sectors in the Age of Neoliberalism
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4
Outside the Factory Gates: Strikes in Non-Industrial Workplaces around the World
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1
Beyond Methodological Fordism: The Case for Incorporated Comparisons
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Part II Strike Research from a Western European Angle: Class Formation in Non-Industrial Settings
Alexander Gallas- 5 Deindustrialization and Dwindling Union Density: Labour in Western Europe
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6
Union Competition and Militancy: The Railway Strikes in Germany
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7
Adsorption and the Struggle against Austerity: The Junior Doctors’ Dispute in Britain
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8
Changing Terrains: The General and Feminist General Strikes in Spain
- Conclusion
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End Matter
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