The building of the democratic tradition in South Africa's trade unions after 1973 |
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Authors: | Sakhela Buhlungu Senior Lecturer |
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Affiliation: | The deputy director , The Royal Institute of International Affairs (Chatham House) , London |
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Abstract: | This article traces the emergence of the democratic union tradition in the trade union movement that emerged in the wake of the 1973 strikes in South Africa. Contrary to the conventional wisdom that attributes the emergence of this tradition solely to a generation of young white union activists and labour-supporting intellectuals, the article argues that this tradition owes its origins to a multiplicity of sources. The article emphasises the social character of trade unions and how they bear the imprint of the historical and cultural heritage and social experiences of their members and leading activists. Thus the article challenges the notion that a social group enters into new associational forms as a tabula rasa. Instead, it claims that the building of the democratic union tradition in South Africa is not just an outcome of intellectual influences but significantly was shaped by the workers' ‘lived experiences’. |
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Keywords: | democracy trade unions worker control lived experiences South Africa intellectuals |
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