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This version was published on September 1, 2008
Business & Society, Vol. 47, No. 3, 312-342 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/0007650307299223

Going to War With the Army You Have

Labor's Shareholder Activism in an Era of Financial Hegemony

Richard Marens

Sacramento State University

According to Arrighi and Silver, the United States faces a crisis of declining hegemony historically characterized by stagnating wages, hypertrophy of the financial sector, and the shifting of production overseas. Previous cycles suggest that the fate of workers within the hegemonic core depends in part on their political and organizational response. For a generation, organized labor in the United States has sought ways to exercise influence over private and public pension funds. As a result, union staffers have become sophisticated shareholder activists. Recent financial scandals have created a new opening for these activists, who have responded by forming coalitions to reform executive pay. The recent dismissal of a California Personnel Employees Retirement System official implies limits to this investor "pluralism," but the situation is hardly settled. Another economic downturn might move the interests of investors and workers closer together, and shareholder activists could play a role settling the resulting conflicts over the distribution of income.

Key Words: corporate governance • labor • institutional investors • finance • hegemony • globalization


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