Capitalism, Class Conflict and the New Middle Class

Regular price €179.80
A01=Bob Carter
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Author_Bob Carter
capitalist
Capitalist Labour Process
Capitalist Production Process
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Changing State Structures
collar
Double Entry
Double Entry Bookkeeping
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Human Relations Approach
Inside Contractors
ISTC
labour
Local Authority Personal Social Services
Middle Class Labour
Middle Class Trade Unionism
Middle Class Workers
Poulantzas's Work
Poulantzas’s Work
Salaried Employees
Specialist Knowledge Functions
staff
Staff Associations
trade
TUC Union
UK Association
union
unionism
Valorisation Process
West Germany
white
White Collar Labour
White Collar Trade Union
White Collar Unionism
White Collar Workers
Women White Collar Workers
workers

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138782242
  • Weight: 521g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Aug 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Non-manual workers are fast becoming the largest occupational category in Western capitalist countries. This is the first book to present a detailed socialist analysis of this much discussed change in the class structure of contemporary capitalism.

Focusing on the class position of managerial and supervisory workers, Robert Carter takes as his starting-point the inadequacy of both orthodox Marxist and Weberian models of class relations. Rather, he concurs with recent structuralist theorists of class who maintain that there exists between capital and labour in the process of producing a new middle class. He parts company from the work of these theorists, however, in his insistence that the organisation and consciousness of the new middle class have also to be examined because of the practical consequences these have on class relations.

The book therefore examines the historical rise of the middle class, both in the private and the state sector, together with the tendency of the class to respond to its changing relations with capital and labour by unionising. It is sharply critical of the dominant models of the causes and nature of white-collar unionism – both industrial relations and Weberian ones – and indeed rejects these models in favour of a perspective which views the extent and nature of middle-class unionism within the dynamics of class relations.