Union Organizing and Membership Growth : Why Don't They Organize?
Author
Fiorito, Jack
Jarley, Paul
Attention
2299/10369
Abstract
This study analyzes U.S. union organizing activity and membership growth from 1990-2004, a period in which an overall pattern of union decline continued and in which organizing achieved renewed prominence as both a union policy and public policy issue. Models for organizing activity and membership growth were proposed and tested. Union decentralization and employer opposition were found to be key predictors of organizing activity differences among unions. These same factors, along with organizing activity, helped explain union differences in membership growth, as did a “Sweeney era” effect.