Full Citation
Title: The Spread of Anti-Union Business Coordination: Evidence from the Open-Shop Movement in the U.S. Interwar Period
Citation Type: Journal Article
Publication Year: 2018
ISBN:
ISSN: 0898-588X; 1469-8692
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0898588X18000044
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Abstract: What explains the development of repressive employer coordination? Classic historical American business and labor literature focuses on institutions of labor repression and employer associations, but little systematic examination of such associations exists, particularly during the interwar period. Similarly, recent political science literature on the origins of industrial institutions underemphasizes the importance of repressive employer associations. I use new quantitative subnational evidence from the U.S. interwar period, with data from the open-shop movement in the United States at the local level after World War I. I test a variety of families of hypotheses regarding variation in repressive employer coordination, with specific data measuring the threat posed by organized labor. I find that such threats posed by unions are correlated to repressive employer associations. The results have implications for understanding local-level variation in the business repression of labor movements in the early twentieth century and contribute to our understanding of labor repressive institutions and the incentives of firms to collectively act.
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Authors: Kuo, Alexander
Periodical (Full): Studies in American Political Development
Issue: 1
Volume: 32
Pages: 103-126
Data Collections: IPUMS CPS
Topics: Labor Force and Occupational Structure
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