Overview
- Authors:
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Bernhard Ebbinghaus
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Jelle Visser
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About this book
The Societies of Europe is an 8-title series of historical data handbooks and accompanying CD-ROM sets, on the development of Europe from the nineteenth to the twentieth century. The series is a product of the Mannheim Centre for Social research, a body dedicated to comparative research on Europe and one of the leading social research institutes in the world. It is a collection of datasets giving a clear and systematic study of long term developments in European society. The data is presented statistically and is clearly comparative. The Societies of Europe is the most comprehensive data series available on Western European social issues. Each book is accompanied by a CD-ROM containing data sets not included in the text enabling users to manipulate the data as wanted. Information is available in different programmes (Excel, SPSS and SAS) and in data structures for analysis, viewing and building time series. This comparative data handbook offers an empirical base to a long-term and comparative understanding of changes and variations in European union movements. It provides information on the context and history of union development, the changes in the structure of post-war unionism until today, the long-term trends in union membership and union density, and the shifts in the cross-sectional composition of union membership. This book and CD-ROM are the result of many years of research by the authors in collaboration with an international research team, and provides an original source for comparative and national studies or individual enquiries. The country and comparative tables offer cross-checked and often newly-calculated statistics on national union organizations and their membership series. The CD-ROM includes selected tables from the handbook and provides additional databases with organizational data and membership series of major national and European union organizations.
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Table of contents (17 chapters)
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Introduction
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- Bernhard Ebbinghaus, Jelle Visser
Pages 3-32
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- Bernhard Ebbinghaus, Jelle Visser
Pages 33-74
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Country Profiles and Tables
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- Bernhard Ebbinghaus, Sabine Blaschke, Ferdinand Karlhofer, Franz Traxler
Pages 77-110
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- Bernhard Ebbinghaus, Jelle Visser, Patrick Pasture, Hans Slomp
Pages 111-155
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- Bernhard Ebbinghaus, Steen Scheuer
Pages 157-199
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- Jelle Visser, Patrick Dufour, René Mouriaux, Françoise Subilieu
Pages 237-277
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- Bernhard Ebbinghaus, Klaus Armingeon, Anke Hassel
Pages 279-337
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- William K. Roche, Joe Larragy, Jacqueline Ashmore
Pages 339-369
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- Reinhard Naumann, Alan Stoleroff
Pages 545-572
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- Bernhard Ebbinghaus, Robert Fluder
Pages 657-703
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- Bernhard Ebbinghaus, Jeremy Waddington
Pages 705-756
Reviews
'...an exceptionally detailed work of reference on trade union membership statistics.' - John Kelly, London School of Economics, British Journal of Industrial Relations
'The work accomplished by Ebbinghaus and Visser is a vast resource...An indispensable reference tool for anyone writing on, or seeking to understand, trade unionism in the different countries of western Europe.' - Richard Hyman, London School of Economics, Transfer
'[A]n extraordinary display of painstaking historical and sociological research.' - Colin Church, European University Institute, Industrial Relations Journal
About the authors
DR BERNARD EBBINGHAUS is Senior Researcher at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies (MPIfG) in Cologne. He taught sociology at the University of Mannheim and coordinated, with Jelle Visser, the international project on 'The Development of Trade Unions in Western Europe'. He was a John F. Kennedy Fellow (1999/2000) at the Centre for European Studies (CES), Harvard University.
DR JELLE VISSER is Professor of Empirical Sociology at the University of Amsterdam and Director of CESAR, a labour relations research group. He was a visiting researcher at the Mannheim Centre for European Social Research. Professor Visser is also a visiting scholar at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Socieites in Cologne. He has also served as consultant to the OECD and ILO on union statistics.