Introduction; Institutions, the state, and capitalism; Part I:
Industrialization, Democratization, and Class Organization: The
formation of labour movements; The employer counter-attack; Part
II: Towards Central Regulation: Towards joint central regulation in
Britain; State regulation and joint central regulation in Sweden;
Part III: Industrial Conflict, Institutions and Corporatism:
Institutional inadequacy, corporatism, and industrial conflict in
post-war
Britain; Institutional adequacy, corporatism, and industrial
conflict in Sweden; Part IV: Capitalism, Neo-liberalism, and
Socialism: Capitalism and neo-liberalism in Britain; Capitalism and
Socialism in
Sweden; Summary and concluding discussion
`The author supplies a very interesting historical background to
recent developments.'
Labour Research Development
`John Fulcher's comparative study of British and Swedish trade
unions and industrial-political relations rewards careful
study.'
Tribune
'James Fulcher has written an excellent book which is both
scholarly and comprehensive. It is an example of comparative
sociology at its best.'
VRichard Scase, University of Kent at Canterbury, British Journal &
Industrial Relations
'The first half of the book is a historical tour de force ...
Fulcher has provided us with a well-reasoned , carefully and
thoroughly researched analysis of variations in the Swedish and
British industrial relations systems.'
Economic and Industrial Democracy
'an impressive, thought-provoking piece of scholarship'
Michael Moran, University of Manchester, Political Studies
(1992)
`[Fulcher's] fascinating use of a new historiographical type of
analysis reveals a great deal of new comparativve history about
each country.'
Choice
`James Fulcher has written a pretty solid book ... He draws on a
wide range of original sources, which those with less Swedish would
simply not be able to do.'
Sociology
`Here, a comparative, disciplined, multi-causal, multi-layered,
historical and dynamic model has been used to illuminate in a most
interesting manner how and why Britain and Sweden developed quite
different sets of labour movements and leftist parties, as well as
opposing industrial relations structures and political systems,
despite their common industrialization and democratization and the
recurring dilemmas of social democrative reform efforts.'
West European Politics
'useful and readable ... solid, well-researched, competent, and
fair, ... Fulcher's book is significantly new and original'
Richard De Angelis, Flinders University of South Australia, West
European Politics, Vol. 15, No. 4, Oct 1992
'this book, based on an impressive command of the Swedish
literature, easily equals even the best available works in
Swedish'
Peter Swenson, University of Pennsylvania, Industrial and Labor
Relations Review
`James Fulcher has written a solid book. It is important not just
for the author's considerable knowledge of Swedish sources but also
for his skill in deploying a detailed comparative and historical
argument.'
Labour History Review
`The Swedish system of industrial relations has been held up as a
model and a reproach to the British for so long that it is
refreshing to be offered an objective comparison which challenges
accepted wisdom ... Fulcher has written an important book which has
something fresh and useful, if rather complex, to say to the
conflicting and cooperating individuals who operate the industrial
relations of modern societies and stand in need of its
insights.'
Journal of Interdisciplinary History
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