Affiliation:
1. Department of Sociology, Private Bag 3, University of
the Witwatersrand, P.O. Wits 2050, Johannesburg, South Africa
Abstract
The labor movement was one of the main actors in popular resistance to apartheid in South Africa. A militant working class, radicalized by a deeply entrenched socialist discourse and organized through practices stressing grassroots self-organization decisively shaped the transition to democracy. In post-apartheid South Africa organized labor faces a new set of challenges. The contest over labor's role in the economic reconstruction and the challenges of a tripartite industrial relations system are confronting trade unions with a new dilemma. They have to remain responsive to grassroots militancy while, at the same time, channeling it in a development effort that emphasizes social pacts and non-adversarialism. This paper analyzes these issues, emphasizing the social processes of the construction of militancy at the workplace as crucial to the analysis of unions in transition.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science
Reference109 articles.
1. Challenging Transition Theory: The Labor Movement, Radical Reform, and Transition to Democracy in South Africa
2. Adler, Glenn and Gerald O'Sullivan . 1996. "Rounding Up the Usual Suspects: Recycling the Labour Aristocracy Thesis" Pp. 165-185 in Jeremy Baskin, ed. Against the Current: Labour and Economic Policy in South Africa. Johannesburg: Ravan.
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