Paying dues to the union: A study of blue-collar workers in a right-to-work environment |
| |
Authors: | John M. Jermier Cynthia Fryer Cohen Jeannie Gaines |
| |
Affiliation: | (1) University of South Florida, 33620 Tampa, FL |
| |
Abstract: | Of the 39 states that permit some form of public sector collective bargaining, union security agreements are prohibited in 19. Employees may join and pay dues to the union representing them in these states but they are not required to do so. This study of 372 state government workers compares union dues-payers and non-dues-payers on a variety of personal, positional, economic, and noneconomic variables. Workers who were exposed to more physical danger and less noise were more likely to be dues-payers; higher seniority workers and skilled craftworkers were more likely to pay dues. Results suggest that union voting and union dues-paying have different antecedents. They also raise questions about the generalizability of previous dues-paying research to blue-collar settings. Holding a union card in a right-to-work environment seems to have little to do with the traditional collective pursuit of economic power. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|