British trade unions and the academics: the case of Unionlearn

Article


McIlroy, J. and Croucher, R. 2013. British trade unions and the academics: the case of Unionlearn. Capital and Class. 37 (2), pp. 263-284. https://doi.org/10.1177/0309816813487134
TypeArticle
TitleBritish trade unions and the academics: the case of Unionlearn
AuthorsMcIlroy, J. and Croucher, R.
Abstract

Unionlearn and union learning representatives were developed by the British TUC to match workers with education and training opportunities, strengthen the economy, foster market inclusion and facilitate social mobility. Their contribution to union revitalisation was emphasised. This article questions whether, with unions confronting global crisis, this is a necessary initiative. It stemmed from TUC failure to achieve policy goals, institutional needs, consequent acceptance of a lesser role, and the availability of state finance. Claims by academics that it provides influence over state policy and contributes to revitalisation remain inadequately evidenced. Union resurgence is not immanent. The way forward is through adversarial grassroots organising and socialist education, not through retooling capital, improving members’ marketability and partnership with a hostile state.

Research GroupEmployment Relations group
PublisherSage
JournalCapital and Class
ISSN0309-8168
Publication dates
PrintJun 2013
Publication process dates
Deposited04 Jul 2014
Output statusPublished
Accepted author manuscript
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1177/0309816813487134
LanguageEnglish
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