4.3 Article

The Revival of Labour Movement Studies in Argentina: Old and Lost Agendas

Journal

WORK EMPLOYMENT AND SOCIETY
Volume 33, Issue 5, Pages 865-876

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0950017018800233

Keywords

Argentina; labour movement; labour studies; sociological research; workers; workers' organization

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In recent years sociological research on labour in Argentina has re-flourished. This revival has seen a turn towards the Anglo-Saxon and international traditions of workplace and trade union studies, but it has been generally one-sided, focusing on the relatively successful experiences of trade unions' organized workers in formal sector workplaces. This has represented a considerable departure from the pre-2001 crisis research's agenda that focused on unemployment, poverty and the new forms of community based organizations generated by workers in non-work situations. The return to the institutionalized sphere in the analysis of work issues can be partially explained by the changes in the economic and political environment alongside the return to 'normality' of the capital-labour relationship. However, it also signals a tendency in labour studies, in Argentina and beyond, of using the union form as the main organizational frame of reference in the analyses of conflict and workers' representation.

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