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An analysis of the independent trade unions in South Africa in the 1970s

The thesis is an historical and sociological study of the independent trade unions in South Africa in the 1970s. Several research methods were used: participant and non-participant observation, primary and secondary source, and open-ended interviews. In addition, shown to the unions for correction o...

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Main Author: Maree, Johannes Gerhardus Bester
Other Authors: Wilson, Francis
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Sociology 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Maree, Johannes Gerhardus Bester
author2 Wilson, Francis
author_browse Maree, Johannes Gerhardus Bester
Wilson, Francis
author_facet Wilson, Francis
Maree, Johannes Gerhardus Bester
author_sort Maree, Johannes Gerhardus Bester
collection Thesis
description The thesis is an historical and sociological study of the independent trade unions in South Africa in the 1970s. Several research methods were used: participant and non-participant observation, primary and secondary source, and open-ended interviews. In addition, shown to the unions for correction of clarification of issues. material, structured earlier drafts were factual errors and the findings of the thesis are as follows: historically, the independent unions went through two stages in the 1970s. During the first stage they struggled for survival against capital and the state, which opposed their very existence. At the end of 1976 their future hung in the balance because of political turmoil, economic recession, and state repression. But they survived and in the second stage they fought to gain formal recognition at a limited number of companies. Sociologically, the thesis focusses on two major themes: the efforts of the independent unions to be democratic organisations and their strategies to acquire power. A central finding is that the independent unions strove to build up their strength by organising democratically at the workplace. Certain strategies in organising and tactics in industrial disputes were more successful than others in helping the unions build up their strength. The unions went through a democratisation process that entailed three phases: the creation of democratic structures in the unions, developing workers' capacities to take control of the structures, and the emergence of representative and accountable worker leadership. While this process had not been completed by the end of the period under consideration, the strong influence initially exercised by intellectual leaders was reduced considerably. The empirical findings of the thesis are used to evaluate the appropriateness of relevant sociological theories of trade unions and related issues. They are frequently found to be inappropriate , being based on conditions very different from those that faced the independent unions. Finally , it is concluded that the democratic form of organisation adopted by the independent unions in the 1970s had a definite political significance which started emerging in the 1980s.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:51.499Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Department of Sociology
publisherStr Department of Sociology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38942 An analysis of the independent trade unions in South Africa in the 1970s Maree, Johannes Gerhardus Bester Wilson, Francis Sociology The thesis is an historical and sociological study of the independent trade unions in South Africa in the 1970s. Several research methods were used: participant and non-participant observation, primary and secondary source, and open-ended interviews. In addition, shown to the unions for correction of clarification of issues. material, structured earlier drafts were factual errors and the findings of the thesis are as follows: historically, the independent unions went through two stages in the 1970s. During the first stage they struggled for survival against capital and the state, which opposed their very existence. At the end of 1976 their future hung in the balance because of political turmoil, economic recession, and state repression. But they survived and in the second stage they fought to gain formal recognition at a limited number of companies. Sociologically, the thesis focusses on two major themes: the efforts of the independent unions to be democratic organisations and their strategies to acquire power. A central finding is that the independent unions strove to build up their strength by organising democratically at the workplace. Certain strategies in organising and tactics in industrial disputes were more successful than others in helping the unions build up their strength. The unions went through a democratisation process that entailed three phases: the creation of democratic structures in the unions, developing workers' capacities to take control of the structures, and the emergence of representative and accountable worker leadership. While this process had not been completed by the end of the period under consideration, the strong influence initially exercised by intellectual leaders was reduced considerably. The empirical findings of the thesis are used to evaluate the appropriateness of relevant sociological theories of trade unions and related issues. They are frequently found to be inappropriate , being based on conditions very different from those that faced the independent unions. Finally , it is concluded that the democratic form of organisation adopted by the independent unions in the 1970s had a definite political significance which started emerging in the 1980s. 2023-09-28T13:37:37Z 2023-09-28T13:37:37Z 1986 2023-09-28T12:42:14Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38942 eng application/pdf Department of Sociology Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Sociology
Maree, Johannes Gerhardus Bester
An analysis of the independent trade unions in South Africa in the 1970s
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title An analysis of the independent trade unions in South Africa in the 1970s
title_full An analysis of the independent trade unions in South Africa in the 1970s
title_fullStr An analysis of the independent trade unions in South Africa in the 1970s
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of the independent trade unions in South Africa in the 1970s
title_short An analysis of the independent trade unions in South Africa in the 1970s
title_sort analysis of the independent trade unions in south africa in the 1970s
topic Sociology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38942
work_keys_str_mv AT mareejohannesgerhardusbester ananalysisoftheindependenttradeunionsinsouthafricainthe1970s
AT mareejohannesgerhardusbester analysisoftheindependenttradeunionsinsouthafricainthe1970s