Confronting Race and Other Social Identity Erasures: The Case for Critical Industrial Relations Theory
Tamara L. Lee and
Maite Tapia
ILR Review, 2021, vol. 74, issue 3, 637-662
Abstract:
Despite the salience of racism and other “isms†woven into the fabric of US society, there is a dearth of industrial relations (IR) scholarship that engages critical race and intersectional theory (CRT/I) to deeply understand how structural racism and other social identity-based systems of oppression govern labor and employment systems. The authors call for the incorporation of CRT/I into IR to address the erasure of vital counter-narratives and to expand our empirical cases for labor and employment research. Focusing on leading scholarship on worker organizing, the authors confront white dominance in our research questions, methodologies, and analyses to illustrate how traditional “color-blind†and meritocracy-based IR theories lead to the exclusion of relevant knowledge. In an era of heightened public discourse and worker uprisings in response to deep-rooted systemic inequities, critical industrial relations research is vital to the field’s relevance and its expertise in explaining the nature and consequences of contemporary labor contestations and their impact on the future of the labor movement.
Keywords: industrial relations theory; critical race theory; intersectionality; social identity; worker organizing (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:sae:ilrrev:v:74:y:2021:i:3:p:637-662
DOI: 10.1177/0019793921992080
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