When do U.S. workers first experience unionization? Implications for revitalizing the labor movement
Industrial Relations: A Journal of Economy and Society
2010
49
2
209-225
survey ; trade unionization ; trade union renewal
Trade unionism
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-232X.2009.00596.x
English
Bibliogr.
"Debates over revitalizing the U.S. labor movement often overlook when workers are first unionized. This article analyzes the frequency and nature of workers' first unionized jobs by tracking a cohort of individuals from age 15/16 to 40/41. Though workers are most likely to be unionized when they are in their forties, this article shows that surprising numbers of individuals first encounter unionization in their jobs at a much younger age. These results highlight the importance of experiential union membership models as well as life-cycle union representation strategies that recognize the young age at which many workers are first unionized."
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