Review: "The future of unions and worker representation: The digital picket line" by Anthony Forsyth, Hart Publishing, Oxford, 2022.
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Open Access
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ArticleAuthor/s
McCrystal, ShaeAbstract
The 'digital picket line', the subtitle of this significant new monograph by Professor Anthony Forsyth, nicely evokes the themes that permeate this study of the future of trade unions and worker representation. As Forsyth observes, the term is 'emblematic of the transformation in ...
See moreThe 'digital picket line', the subtitle of this significant new monograph by Professor Anthony Forsyth, nicely evokes the themes that permeate this study of the future of trade unions and worker representation. As Forsyth observes, the term is 'emblematic of the transformation in union forms and tactics ... needed to ensure that unions continue to play an effective role as the representative of workers into the future'. Forsyth sets out the challenge for the trade union movement to identify 'how the revitalisation of unions can be achieved and what collectivism must look like to ensure the effective representation of workers' interests into the future'. Adopting Visser’s categorisation of four possible futures for the union movement (marginalisation, dualisation, replacement, revitalisation), Forsyth contends that revitalisation for unions is viable provided the union movement commits to the underlying preconditions to enable revitalisation to occur.
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See moreThe 'digital picket line', the subtitle of this significant new monograph by Professor Anthony Forsyth, nicely evokes the themes that permeate this study of the future of trade unions and worker representation. As Forsyth observes, the term is 'emblematic of the transformation in union forms and tactics ... needed to ensure that unions continue to play an effective role as the representative of workers into the future'. Forsyth sets out the challenge for the trade union movement to identify 'how the revitalisation of unions can be achieved and what collectivism must look like to ensure the effective representation of workers' interests into the future'. Adopting Visser’s categorisation of four possible futures for the union movement (marginalisation, dualisation, replacement, revitalisation), Forsyth contends that revitalisation for unions is viable provided the union movement commits to the underlying preconditions to enable revitalisation to occur.
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Date
2022Source title
Australian Journal of Labour LawVolume
35Issue
2Publisher
LexisNexisLicence
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This article was published by LexisNexis and should be cited as: McCrystal, S. (2022). “Review: 'The future of unions and worker representation: The digital picket line' by Anthony Forsyth, Hart Publishing, Oxford, 2022.” Australian Journal of Labour Law, 35(2), 160–163.Faculty/School
The University of Sydney Law SchoolShare