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The Boycott of the Law and the Law of the Boycott: Law, Labour, and Politics in British Columbia
Authors:Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller
Institution:Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller;is an assistant professor of political science at the University of Hawaii. The author acknowledges the helpful comments on earlier drafts of Neal Milner, Sankaran Krishna, Nevzat Soguk, Bob Van Dyke, Antonio Rappa, and several anonymous reviewers. Warm thanks are also extended to Ken Georgetti, Mary Rowles, and the many other members of the British Columbia labour community for their help and cooperation in this research.
Abstract:This article uses a critical theoryllegal mobilization perspective to study the 1987–92 trade union boycott of the British Columbia labour law. The problems encountered establishing a total boycott–one that would eschew all contact with the state–and the subsequent modification of the parameters of the boycott through a selective reliance on the law offer an important case from which to learn more about the role of law and legal rights in highly regulated organizations and how collectives mobilize the law. The author argues that legal rights are important to unions because of their ability to mediate the complexity of labour relations through a decentralization of authority. At the same time, mobilization of the law for this purpose accentuates localized identities and unequal resources that operate in tension with a boycott ethos, necessitating a deliberative politics to legitimize the law. By exploring the tension between these two forms of mobilization around law–one to reduce complexity, another to legitimize broad collective norms–the author analyzes and draws some conclusions about the reproduction of social unionism in British Columbia.
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