TY - CHAP
T1 - Horizontal and Vertical Integration and Transnational Labour Activism
T2 - A Power Resource Approach
AU - Golden, Darragh
AU - Szabó, Imre
AU - Erne, Roland
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Power resource approaches (PRA) remain heavily focused on the national level and have failed to keep apace with contemporary, yet significant, political and economic developments. Whereas the European integration project has put unions on the back foot, it has also resulted in transnational labour activism (TLA), which remains under-theorised by PRA scholars. By drawing on different literatures and two complementary comparative studies, this chapter assesses TLA and ‘scale’ through a PRA lens. We analyse power resources in different sectors by comparing two European Citizens’ Initiatives, one successful and one unsuccessful, and union recognition struggles within Ryanair. Whereas national power resources failed, supranational power resources proved critical in explaining the airline’s decision to recognise unions. We find that TLA is also shaped by structural conditions, i.e. the prevailing mode of European integration. Here, we differentiate between ‘horizontal’ and ‘vertical’ integration and place an emphasis on the interplay of power resources that exist at different scales in explaining successful outcomes.
AB - Power resource approaches (PRA) remain heavily focused on the national level and have failed to keep apace with contemporary, yet significant, political and economic developments. Whereas the European integration project has put unions on the back foot, it has also resulted in transnational labour activism (TLA), which remains under-theorised by PRA scholars. By drawing on different literatures and two complementary comparative studies, this chapter assesses TLA and ‘scale’ through a PRA lens. We analyse power resources in different sectors by comparing two European Citizens’ Initiatives, one successful and one unsuccessful, and union recognition struggles within Ryanair. Whereas national power resources failed, supranational power resources proved critical in explaining the airline’s decision to recognise unions. We find that TLA is also shaped by structural conditions, i.e. the prevailing mode of European integration. Here, we differentiate between ‘horizontal’ and ‘vertical’ integration and place an emphasis on the interplay of power resources that exist at different scales in explaining successful outcomes.
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-031-86209-0_12
DO - 10.1007/978-3-031-86209-0_12
M3 - Chapter
SN - 9783031862113
SN - 9783031862083
T3 - Palgrave Studies in European Political Sociology
SP - 259
EP - 280
BT - Contentious Politics in the Transnational Arena
A2 - Milan, Chiara
A2 - Buzogány, Aron
PB - Palgrave Macmillan Cham
ER -