Search results for "Industrial action"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

The Worst Record in Europe?: A Comparative Analysis of Industrial Conflict in Spain

2001

Since the transition to democracy, Spain has recorded the highest strike rate of EU countries. Drawing on a comparison with Franzosi's analysis of strikes in Italy, this article seeks to explain the high number of working days lost in Spain by reference to the role of sectoral bargaining, the instability of corporatist relations, solidaristic features of worker representation and Spanish society, and the development of industrial action by unions outside the main confederations. It is suggested that the pattern of industrial conflict reflects the limited strategic options available to Spanish trade unions and Spanish employers' ambivalence toward industrial relations institutions. The arti…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementStrategy and Managementmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesIndustrial actionIndustrial conflict050209 industrial relationsAmbivalenceGeneral Business Management and AccountingEu countriesDemocracy0506 political scienceRepresentation (politics)EconomyManagement of Technology and Innovation0502 economics and businessStrike rate050602 political science & public administrationEconomicsIndustrial relationsmedia_commonEuropean Journal of Industrial Relations
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Who shapes the news? Analyzing journalists’ and organizational interests as competing influences on biased coverage

2018

This study investigates influences on gatekeeping processes that have the potential to cause biased media coverage. We tested whether and, if so, to what extent journalists’ and organizational interests affect journalistic news processing. In a content analysis, we contrasted the press coverage (n = 1199 articles) of trade disputes of newspaper journalists with the coverage of other trade disputes. Results indicate both coverage and statement bias. In their coverage of newspaper disputes, journalists evaluated employers’ offers significantly more negatively, framed industrial action as legitimate, and criticized employers’ behavior during strikes.

Statement (logic)Communication05 social sciencesIndustrial action050801 communication & media studiesMedia coverageAdvertisingAffect (psychology)Gatekeeping0506 political scienceNewspaper0508 media and communicationsArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Content analysisPolitical science050602 political science & public administrationJournalismJournalism
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