Abstract
As labor in the capitalist system practically tripled to some three billion workers, solidary organizations of labor simultaneously dwindled in relative size and power. This is true globally but also for the historical core countries. While this is a paradox, it is not a contradiction. Capital is a (spatialized) social relationship. The globalization of capital since the 1970s has shifted the power relations with localized labor fundamentally in favor of capital, as Charles Tilly noted in this journal almost thirty years ago. Over time, power balances within capitalist states, and between capitalist states and transnationalizing capital, have reflected that basic class-relational shift. This article explains why the globalizing cycle of weakened labor may now be reversing.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 9 |
Journal | International Labor and Working-Class History |
DOIs | |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 14 Nov 2024 |
Keywords
- Charles Tilly
- globalization
- labor
- neoliberalism
- socialism