List of Illustrations
Preface to the Third Edition
Preface to the Fourth Edition
Foreword: Beyond Fatalism – Renewing Working-Class Politics by Sam
Gindin
Acronyms and Initialisms
1 From the Era of Consent to the Era of Coercion
2 The Postwar Era of Free Collective Bargaining
3 Permanent Exceptionalism: The Turn to Coercion
4 Freeing Trade, Coercing Labour
5 Consolidating Neoliberalism
6 Austerity and Authoritarianism
7 From Great Recession to COVID-19 Crisis
8 The Right to Strike: Freedom of Association and the Charter
9 Labour’s Last Gasp or Revival? Rebuilding Working-Class
Resistance
Notes
Glossary
Index
Bryan Evans is a professor in the Department of Politics
and Public Administration at Toronto Metropolitan University.
Carlo Fanelli is an assistant professor and coordinator of
the Work and Labour Studies Program in the Department of Social
Science at York University.
Leo Panitch was a distinguished research professor of
political science and a Canada Research Chair in comparative
political economy at York University.
Donald Swartz is a professor emeritus in the School of Public Policy and Administration at Carleton University.
"This new edition of From Consent to Coercion, the most widely read
labour studies text of the 1980s, contains much new material on
austerity and authoritarianism in the context of ongoing capitalist
crises of the early twentieth century. Nothing less than a crucial
starting point for all those committed to understanding what
workers confront in our current times, it should contribute to the
task of rebuilding the labour movement to be the fighting force
needed in Canada today. Read it and encourage others to do the
same!"--Bryan D. Palmer, co-author of Toronto's Poor: A Rebellious
History
" From Consent to Coercion is essential reading for understanding
the current labour situation in Canada. A vivid account of the
state's attack on working people's rights to bargain collectively
and to strike, it takes us from the origins of the assault in the
1980s to its most recent incarnation and evaluates the lure of
legalized politics. Urging unions to embrace a new democratic form
of politics that makes capital accountable to people, this book is
a tour de force."--Judy Fudge, LIUNA Enrico Henry Mancinelli Chair
in Global Labour Issues, McMaster University
"The 4th fourth edition of From Consent to Coercion is a
much-needed update to Panitch and Swartz' seminal text.
Incorporating events of the past two decades including the Great
Recession and the COVID pandemic, the authors demonstrate how
Canadian governments shifted the burden of economic crisis onto
workers in a one-two punch of austerity budgets and
highly-interventionist labour policy. A must-read for anyone
interested in the intersection of labour policy and political
economy."--Alison Braley-Rattai, Associate Professor of Labour
Studies, Brock University
"This book is a classic tour de force delivering a detailed
historical account of the plight and struggles of Canadian labour
in the face of an increasingly coercive state apparatus, woven
throughout by an inspired critical political-economy analysis of
class relations and the shifting character of hegemony in Canada,
and beyond. Standing upon the towering work of their forbearers,
Evans and Fanelli successfully extend their analysis forwards
through to the context of the decade of the 2020s. They provide a
new generation with an increasingly accessible and far-reaching
account of this crucial history and theoretical development,
culminating in a bold call for a particular form of union renewal
with its eye more firmly on the prize of moving beyond the limits
of social democracy."--Tim Bartkiw, Ted Rogers School of Management
and Lincoln Alexander School of Law, Toronto Metropolitan
University
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