Industrial Rights: A Neglected Facet of Citizenship Theory
- 1 May 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Economic and Industrial Democracy
- Vol. 15 (2) , 211-226
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0143831x94152004
Abstract
Theoretical treatment of citizenship, beginning with the pathbreaking work of T.H. Marshall, has made short shrift of industrial citizenship. Treating industrial citizenship as subsidiary to civil, political and social citizenship as well as limiting it to the realm of trade union organization and collective bargaining are serious shortcomings. Citizens of advanced societies need also to be shielded against wage competition from underdeveloped societies. The alternative to industrial rights is that the advanced societies will be shown the image of their future by the less developed societies.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- The High Cost cf NAFTAChallenge, 1992
- NAFTA as Social DumpingChallenge, 1992
- Citizenship, Consumption and Rights: A Comment on B. S. Turner's Theory of CitizenshipSociology, 1991
- Citizenship, Social Citizenship and the Defence of Welfare ProvisionBritish Journal of Political Science, 1988
- Ruling Class Strategies and CitizenshipSociology, 1987
- Free Trade versus Fair Trade: Import Barriers as a Problem of Reasonable ValueJournal of Economic Issues, 1987
- Migration and the Political Economy of the Welfare StateThe Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1986
- THE SESQUICENTENNIAL OF PRIESTLY V. FOWLER AND THE CONFLICT OVER WORK AND HEALTHInternational Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 1986
- Profiles and Critiques in Social TheoryPublished by Springer Nature ,1982
- Protection, Real Wages, and the Neoclassical Ambiguity with Interindustry FlowsJournal of Political Economy, 1980