On the outside looking in? A micro-level analysis of insiders' and outsiders' trade union membership
Economic and Industrial Democracy
2022
43
1
February
221-251
social cohesion ; trade union membership ; employment security
Trade unionism
https://doi.org/10.1177/0143831X19890130
English
Bibliogr.
"Although studies have signaled a gap in trade union representation between workers with secure employment (i.e., ‘insiders') and those without (i.e., ‘outsiders'), this gap has rarely been empirically analyzed at the micro-level. With recent micro-level data from the Netherlands, this study addresses two questions. First, to what extent do insiders and outsiders, measured through individuals' employment status and self-perceived social risk, differ in their willingness/probability to join trade unions? Second, to what extent can these differences in trade union membership be explained as resulting from perceptions of interest representation and/or workplace social cohesion? The results suggests a clear insider–outsider gap in trade union membership related to employment status, but not to social risk. Furthermore, this gap can be explained by differences in perceptions of representation, but not workplace social cohesion."
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