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      Blue Solidarity: Police Unions, Race and Authoritarian Populism in North America

      1 , 1
      Work, Employment and Society
      SAGE Publications

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          Abstract

          With a focus on police unions in the United States and Canada, this article argues that the construction of ‘blue solidarity’, including through recent Blue Lives Matter campaigns, serves to repress racial justice movements that challenge police authority, acts as a counter to broader working class resistance to austerity and contributes to rising right-wing populism. Specifically, the article develops a case study analysis of Blue Lives Matter campaigns in North America to argue that police unions construct forms of ‘blue solidarity’ that produce divisions with other labour and social movements and contribute to a privileged status of their own members vis-a-vis the working class more generally. As part of this process, police unions support tactics that reproduce racialised ‘othering’ and that stigmatise and discriminate against racialised workers and communities. The article concludes by arguing that organised labour should maintain a critical distance from police unions.

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          Most cited references30

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          Rethinking Industrial Relations

          John Kelly (2012)
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            Reconstructing Solidarity

            Reconstructing Solidarity is a book about unions’ struggles against the expansion of precarious work in Europe, and the implications of these struggles for worker solidarity and institutional change. The authors argue against the ‘dualization’ thesis that unions act primarily to protect labour market insiders at the expense of outsiders, finding instead that most unions attempt to organize and represent precarious workers. They explain differences in union success in terms of how they build, or fail to build, inclusive worker solidarity, in countries or industries with more or less inclusive institutions. Where unions can limit employers’ ability to ‘exit’ from labour market institutions and collective agreements and build solidarity across different groups of workers, this results in a virtuous circle, establishing union control over the labour market. Where they fail to do so, it sets in motion a vicious circle of expanding precarity based on institutional evasion by employers. The book builds its argument on comparative case studies from Belgium, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Slovenia, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. Contributors describe the struggles of workers and unions in diverse industries such as local government, music, metalworking, chemicals, meatpacking, and logistics.
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              Carceral Chicago: Making the Ex-offender Employability Crisis

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Work, Employment and Society
                Work, Employment and Society
                SAGE Publications
                0950-0170
                1469-8722
                February 2020
                July 26 2019
                February 2020
                : 34
                : 1
                : 126-144
                Affiliations
                [1 ]York University, Canada
                Article
                10.1177/0950017019863653
                de3d78d7-7b2e-4d49-9a42-370c107bfdd5
                © 2020

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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