Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 256
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7425-0999-3 • Paperback • September 2001 • $60.00 • (£46.00)
Stephen Crowley is associate professor of politics, Oberlin College. David Ost is professor of political science, Hobart and William Smith Colleges.
Chapter 1 Introduction: The Surprise of Labor Weakness in Post-Communist Society
Chapter 2 Labor and Trade Unions in the Czech Republic, 1989-2000
Chapter 3 The Failure of Social-Democratic Unionism in Hungary
Chapter 4 Neocorporatism in Slovakia: Formalizing Labor Weakness in a (Re)democratizing State
Chapter 5 The Weakness of Symbolic Strength: Labor and Union Identity in Poland: 1989-2000
Chapter 6 Winning the Battles, Losing the War: Contradictions of Romanian Labor in the Post-Communist Transformation
Chapter 7 Bulgarian Trade Unions in Transition: The Taming of the Hedgehog
Chapter 8 The Cost of Nationalism: Croatian Labor, 1990 - 1999
Chapter 9 Waiting for the Workers: Explaining Labor Quiescence in Serbia
Chapter 10 Workers and Unions in Postcommunist Ukraine
Chapter 11 The Social Explosion That Wasn't: Labor Quiescence in Post-Communist Russia
Chapter 12 Conclusion: Making Sense of Labor's Weakness in Poscommunism
The individual country chapters provide invaluable detail on the development and progress of trade unions in each context. The book will obviously be read by specialists in the field, should be dipped into by country specialists who perhaps know little about this aspect of transition, and could usefully be recommended to those academics and students concerned more generally with trade unions and the collective organization of labor in the twenty-first century.
— Slavic Review
This book is a valuable contribution to discussions of the future of labor.
— Labor History
The volume as a whole is a helpful guide for understanding trends in labor power in post-communist Europe, as well as broader economic and political change both there and in other transitional societies. Recommended to academic scholars and students of post-communist Europe. Practitioners and policy-makers from the region who are interested in political aspects of union restructuring may also find the book valuable.
— Industrial and Labor Relations Review
This informative volume provides a valuable snapshot of the last 10 years of union politics in Eastern Europe. It offers a sound basis for further debates on union weakness and very suitable material for graduate courses in economic sociology, labor studies, and comparative politics, union or otherwise.
— American Journal of Sociology
A valuable collection of studies of labour and the Eastern European transition that has much to offer a wider audience.
— Labour/Le Travail: Journal Of Canadian Labour Studies
Crowley and Ost have put together a valuable contribution to the comparative study of labor in postcommunist Eastern Europe including most of the Balkans, the Ukraine, and Russia.
— Balkan Academic News Book Review