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Putting the group back into unions: a social psychological contribution to understanding union support

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Article

Blackwood, Leda ; Lafferty, George ; Duck, Julie ; Terry, Deborah

Journal of Industrial Relations

2003

45

4

485-504

trade unionism ; trade union role ; trade union ; trade union membership

Australia

Trade unionism

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.0022-1856.2003.00095.x

English

Bibliogr.

"ndustrial relations research that attempts to grapple with individuals' union-related sentiments and activities often draws on one of two traditions of psychological research—the individual-level factors tradition (for example, personality and attitude-behaviour relations) and the social context tradition (for example, frustration-aggression and relative deprivation). This paper provides an overview of research conducted from within these traditions to explain union-related phenomena and identifies some of the limitations that arise as a consequence of a shared tendency to treat people in an atomistic fashion. The paper argues for an understanding of the psychological processes that underpin group-based action. To this end, it elaborates a theoretical framework based on social identity theory and self-categorisation theory that would allow us to examine the dynamic interplay between the individual, their cognitions and their environment. The paper concludes with a brief discussion of a specific case of union mobilisation, to indicate how this theoretical framework might aid empirical analysis."

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