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METHODOLOGICAL (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   087030


Afterword: beyond the 'new' international labour studies / Munck, Ronaldo   Journal Article
Munck, Ronaldo Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract The 'new' international labour studies set out some 30 years ago to define a new object of study and a new trans-disciplinary methodological approach. How does that project translate into present day concerns with globalisation and labour? The achievements and limitations of this paradigm are surveyed here, taking up many of the insights of this collection and charting some options for the future. I would argue that current attention to gender issues does not seem to be matched by a focus on 'race'/ethnicity divisions between workers and the increasing impact these might well have. More broadly migration studies should, arguably, be more closely integrated into the new international labour studies. In methodological terms we need to shift from the structuralism of the 1970s to a post-structuralism that will allow us to critically deconstruct mainstream approaches to labour and development.
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2
ID:   086990


How (not) to operationalise subnational political opportunity s: Critique of kestila and soderlund's study of regional elections / Arzheimer, Kai; Carter, Elisabeth   Journal Article
Carter, Elisabeth Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Based on an aggregate analysis of the French regional elections of 2004, Kestilä and Söderlund, in their 2007 article, 'Subnational Political Opportunity Structures and the Success of the Radical Right: Evidence from the March 2004 Regional Elections in France', examine the impact of subnational political opportunity structures on the success of the radical right and argue that such an approach can control for a wider range of factors and provide more reliable results than cross-national analyses. The present article disputes this claim on theoretical, conceptual and methodological grounds and demonstrates that their empirical findings are spurious.
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