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Test Bank to Accompany McQuarrie/Industrial Relations in Canada, Fourth Edition
CHAPTER 2
THEORIES OF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS
Multiple Choice Questions
1. Which of the following is an example of a craft guild in 17th-century North America?
A)
Weaving
B)
Tool making
C)
Carpentry
D)
All of the above
Answer A
Page 30
easy
2. Call centre jobs are not characterized by the following
A)
Low paying
B)
Unrewarding
C)
Good pension plans
D)
Little job security
Answer C
Page 28
intermediate
3. Which of the following was not a function served by craft guilds in North America?
A)
Supplying insurance
B)
Providing a replacement during the ownerโs absence
C)
Education
D)
Financial planning
Answer D
Page 30-31 intermediate
4. In the factories of the Industrial Revolution, control of the business rested with the
factory owner. Which of these was not a function performed at the discretion of the
owner?
A)
Designing the production process
B)
Designing a payment schedule in conformity with the guidelines established by
the craft guild
C)
Deciding how the work was to be performed
D)
Deciding who would perform the work
Answer B
Page 33
intermediate
5. A law was passed in Britain in 1819 that placed limits on child labour. These limits
included which of the following?
A)
A prohibition against the hiring of children younger than nine
B)
A prohibition against older children working more than 10 hours per day
C)
A prohibition against adults working more than 12 hours per day
D)
All of the above
Answer A
Page 34
intermediate
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Test Bank to Accompany McQuarrie/Industrial Relations in Canada, Fourth Edition
6. In what aspect of trade unions were the Fabian Society, founded by Sidney and
Beatrice Webb, interested?
A)
The results of the prolonged exposer to unsafe working conditions
B)
advocacy on behalf of working children
C)
legal protection for injured adult workers
D)
how trade unions emerged in response to industrialized work structures
Answer D
Page 34
intermmediate
7. According to the Webbs, what was the primary reason for the emergence of unions?
A)
The need to improve working conditions
B)
The separation between capital and labour
C)
Dissatisfaction with capitalism
D)
The increasing cost of living
Answer B
Page 35
intermediate
8. In the factory-based economy, who provides the capital?
A)
The government
B)
Craft guilds
C)
Investor groups
D)
None of the above
Answer D
Page 35
intermediate
9. According to the Webbs, what two internal devices did unions use to ensure that
unions themselves were democratic and representative of their membersโ interests?
A)
Device of mutual insurance and legal enactment
B)
Device of common rule and collective bargaining
C)
Device of the common rule and restriction of numbers
D)
Device of restriction of numbers and mutual insurance
Answer C
Page 36
intermediate
10. Selig Perlman felt that unions should focus on creating economic security and
opportunity to bring about what result?
A)
The promotion of large-scale social change.
B)
The creation of a stable, long-term basis for union existence.
C)
A rejection of the principles of capitalism.
D)
A greater practical understanding of union members by the middle class.
Answer B
Page 37
difficult
11. Which two elements did John Commons believe would provide opportunities for
unions and lead to the development of national and international unions?
A)
Publicity and improved communication
B)
Transportation and communications
C)
Competition in markets and geography
D)
Skilled workers and transportation
Answer B
Page 37
intermediate
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Test Bank to Accompany McQuarrie/Industrial Relations in Canada, Fourth Edition
12. Which of the following is not a functional type of unionism identified by Robert
Hoxie?
A)
Business unionism
B)
Friendly unionism
C)
Wartime unionism
D)
Predatory unionism
Answer C
Page 38-39 easy
13. According to E. Wight Bakke, what is the workerโs main reason for joining a union?
A)
To counter the forces of capitalism
B)
To achieve a specific standard of living
C)
To improve their political power
D)
To encourage the development of socialism
Answer B
Page 39
intermediate
14. When examining the system put forward by John Dunlop, we see that there are four
contexts in which processes take place. Which of the following is not one of these
contexts?
A)
Technological
B)
Market
C)
Budgetary
D)
Legislative
Answer D
Page 42-43 intermediate
15. According to John Dunlop, the โweb of rulesโ does what within an organization?
A)
Avoids conflict
B)
Ensures order
C)
Governs the interactions between the parties
D)
Ensures compliance with labour legislation
Answer C
Page 43
easy
16. Karl Marx and Freidrich Engels believed that the emergence of unions was a
symptom of what?
A)
The need to overthrow capitalism
B)
An ongoing class struggle
C)
The need for political action
D)
The need to improve workersโ standard of living
Answer B
Page 44
intermediate
17. According to Karl Marx and Freidrich Engels, what was the ultimate goal of unions?
A)
The overthrow of capitalism
B)
To become a vehicle of class discontent
C)
The development of a classless society
D)
All of the above
Answer D
Page 45
intermediate
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Test Bank to Accompany McQuarrie/Industrial Relations in Canada, Fourth Edition
18. According to Harry Braverman, what is the term used to describe a situation where
work is subdivided to such a degree that dependence on highly skilled labour is reduced
or eliminated?
A)
Industrial engineering
B)
Scientific management
C)
Deskilling
D)
Statistical process control
Answer C
Page 45
easy
19. Thomas Kochan, Robert McKersie, and Peter Cappelli believed that employers
have become active rather than reactive participants in industrial relations. Which of the
following is not a phenomenon in support of this assertion?
A)
Companies becoming part of employer associations
B)
Companies lobbying for legislation to reduce the power of unions
C)
The existence of strikebreaking firms
D)
Non-unionized companies harassing employees attempting to organize unions
Answer A
Page 46-47 difficult
20. According to Richard Chaykowski and Anil Verma, why will Canadian unions resist
cooperative relationships with management?
A)
Because they believe they will no longer be needed by workers
B)
Because it could weaken their ability to oppose unwanted change in the future
C)
Because it could weaken their ability to effect social and political change
D)
All of the above
Answer B
Page 48
difficult
21. What is the percentage of the unionized workforce in Canada?
A)
40
B)
33
C)
12
D)
30
Answer D
Page 28
easy
22. The 14th century craft guilds were like unions in what regard?
A)
Provided employment protection to guild members
B)
Provided incentives to members to join
C)
Encouraged members to work on only one aspect of the final product
D)
Acted on behalf of the members with facility owners
Answer A
Page 30
easy
23. Success within the guild required all but the following attributes
A)
Good health
B)
Good support system
C)
Skill
D)
Good work ethic
Answer B
Page 31
intermediate
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Test Bank to Accompany McQuarrie/Industrial Relations in Canada, Fourth Edition
24. The Wool Guild inspired which of the changes to the functioning of the 14th century
guilds?
A)
Encouraged craftspeople to sell directly to the consumer
B)
Structuring the price of the products to include the labour and materials
C)
Reduced the need for a middleman
D)
The way craftspeople were paid
Answer D
Page 32
easy
25. The 18th century new economy focus on production resulted in all but the following
A)
Increased production
B)
Goods produced at lower cost
C)
Wage reduction by 50%
D)
Families being a part of the work life
Answer C
Page 33-34 difficult
26. The Webbs were of what ideological persuasion?
A)
Communists
B)
Socialists
C)
Democrats
D)
Capitalists
Answer B
Page 34
easy
27. Hoxie was fundamentally interested in
A)
How unions served their members
B)
Why people joined unions
C)
How unions emerged
D)
โClass consciousnessโ in union formation
Answer A
Page 38
difficult
28. Which of the following is one of Bakkeโs five factors of the standards of successful
living?
A)
Social status
B)
Integrity
C)
Control
D)
All of the above
Answer D
Page 39-40 easy
29. What may ultimately reduce the percentage of unionized workforces in Canada?
A)
Large scale closures of manufacturing plants
B)
Economic collapse
C)
Public sector shrinkage
D)
Private sector union malaise
Answer C
Page 49
intermediate
30. John Dunlop espoused which of the following theory of industrial relations?
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Test Bank to Accompany McQuarrie/Industrial Relations in Canada, Fourth Edition
A)
โWeb of rulesโ
B)
Union functioning theory
C)
Systems theory
D)
Input, output and process theory
Answer C
Page 40
intermediate
True/False Questions
31. In 17th-century North America, craftspeople rarely owned their own businesses.
False
Page 31
intermediate
32. The relatively high rate of unionization in Canada is due to the private sector being
primarily unionized
False
Page 49
easy
33. Craft guilds tended to control the supply of labour by overseeing apprenticeships
and other forms of education.
True
Page 30
intermediate
34. Kochan, McKersie, and Cappelli suggest that unions must not focus too narrowly on
workplace rules and regulations.
True
Page 7
intermediate
35. Selig Perlman believed that unions needed the support of the middle class and that
they should respect some of the bases of capitalism in order to effectively represent the
interests of workers.
True
Page 36
difficult
36. John Commons suggested that unions could best serve the needs of their members
by confining their activities to a certain geographic area and avoiding the temptation to
create international unions.
False
Page 37
easy
37. Robert Hoxie believed that unions could serve more than one of the four basic
functional types of unionism concurrently and that they could move from one form of
unionism to another as needed.
True
Page 38
intermediate
38. E. Wight Bakke stated that the main reason workers joined a union was to allow
them to use concerted political action as a means to achieve a higher standard of living.
False
Page 39
easy
39. In John Dunlopโs framework, unions are one of two main actors in the industrial
relations system, the other being management.
False
Page 42
easy
6
Test Bank to Accompany McQuarrie/Industrial Relations in Canada, Fourth Edition
40.
Research suggests that multinational employers entering Canada through the purchase
or startup of Canadian subsidiaries adjust to the โCanadian wayโ of industrial relations.
False
Page 48
easy
Short Answer Questions
41. List at least three of the important functions performed by craft guilds in the 17th
century.
i) One function was supplying insurance. The craftsman would pay a fee and if he
or she was unable to work and the guild would make payments to offset the lost
income.
ii) Another function was to control the supply of trained labour by overseeing
apprenticeships
iii) Guilds also served an educational function for their members by providing a
forum for the exchange of information.
iv) Some guilds in more populated areas were able to reduce production costs for
their members by purchasing supplies or raw materials in bulk.
(Page 31, difficult)
42. What were some of the changes brought about by the industrialization and
mechanization of the Industrial Revolution?
New inventions meant great increases in production capacity and less demand for
skilled workers. The prevalence of child labour became the norm thus further
deskilling the work. Relatively low land costs also meant that factories were easily
established and built. Improvements in transportation and communication meant that
raw materials and finished goods could easily be marketed in areas far beyond their
place of origin. As a result, workers were required to travel to the workplace and
their work became far more routine.
(Page 32-33, intermediate)
43. According to the Webbs, what was the primary reason for the emergence of unions?
Explain.
They suggested that the primary reason for the emergence of unions was the
separation between capital and labour. In the pre-Industrial Revolution economy,
labour and capital were both controlled by the worker who invested in his or her own
work and gained the benefits from the sale of that work. In the factory-based
economy, the worker provided labour, but the capital was provided by the factory
owner. This division between capital and labour would lead owners to exploit labour
for their own gain. The objective of unions was to regulate the conditions of
employment in order to protect workersโ interests.
(Page 34-35, intermediate)
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Test Bank to Accompany McQuarrie/Industrial Relations in Canada, Fourth Edition
44. What were the three instruments identified by the Webbs that unions employed to
achieve their purposes and objectives?
The first was the method of mutual insurance, where unions accumulated funds
from union dues and then used those funds to make payments to workers unable to
work.
The second was the method of collective bargaining, where unions acted as
workersโ representatives in negotiating terms and conditions of work with the
employer. The third was the method of legal enactment, where unions lobbied
governments to enact laws guaranteeing basic minimum employment standards.
(Page 35, easy)
45. Using the elements of Work Location, Work Division and Work Training, compare
and contrast the pre and post industrial work structure?
Work Location
Work Division
Work Training
Pre-Industrial Revolution
Post-Industrial Revolution
Home or workshop in home
community
Responsible for entire
production process
Apprenticeship with established
craftsperson or worker
Factory in urbanized centre
Individual part of production
process
Minimal work training as work
was specialized and simplified
(Page 33, intermediate)
46. What were the four functional types of unionism identified by Robert Hoxie? Briefly
explain each type.
The first was business unionism, where the role of the union was to protect the
interests of workers in a particular industry or trade, primarily through the use of
collective bargaining.
The second was friendly or uplifting unionism, where unions acted as a mechanism
to improve standards of living for workers and thus improve society at large. Friendly
unions engaged in collective bargaining and used mutual insurance and political
action to gain desired outcomes.
The third was revolutionary unionism, in which unions would either attempt change
through large-scale political action or through direct action such as sabotage or
violence.
The fourth was predatory unionism, where unions were concerned mainly with
increasing their own power by whatever means possible, sometimes unethically or
illegally.
(Page 38-39, intermediate)
47. E. Wight Bakke details how unions help workers to attain five standards of
successful living. What are the five factors that support these standards?
The first is social status, which can be attained through union membership.
Workers can achieve a higher status by becoming a member of the union executive.
The second is creature comforts. Union membership may allow a worker to enjoy
a standard of living similar to that of his or her peers.
8
Test Bank to Accompany McQuarrie/Industrial Relations in Canada, Fourth Edition
The third is control. The presence of a union in the workplace gives workers
some formal voice in operations and therefore some influence over his or her
working conditions.
The fourth is information. Unions serve as a source of information on companies,
the economy, and society at large. They also run programs to educate workers on
labour matters.
The fifth is integrity. A workerโs decision to join a union is partially based on
whether union membership would enhance the individualโs sense of integrity.
(Page 39-40, difficult)
48. Describe the process of โdeskillingโ as defined by Harry Braverman.
Deskilling occurs where work is specialized or subdivided to such a degree that
dependence on highly skilled labour is reduced or eliminated. This means that
management can use unskilled and semi-skilled workers who are in greater supply
and can be paid less.
(Page 45-46, intermediate)
49. According to Marx and Engels, what is the reason for the existence of unions and
what is their ultimate objective?
The emergence of unions was a symptom of an ongoing class struggle. Unions
were the means by which the working class could avoid exploitation by the upper
class. In order to survive, unions had to have a larger political purpose. They would
be a vehicle of class discontent which would eventually lead to the overturning of
capitalism and the development of a classless society.
(Page 44-45, difficult)
50. During the Industrial Revolution, the use of child labour was commonplace in many
factories. What was the effect of laws passed in Britain in 1819?
Laws passed in Britain in 1819 disallowed the employment of children younger
than nine and prohibited older children from working more than twelve hours per
day. There were still few protections for adult workers and the few that existed were
poorly enforced.
(Page 34, easy)
Critical Thinking Questions
51. Discuss the Industrial Revolutionโs impact on the development and the philosophy of
the labour movement.
Suggested answer:
The answer should touch on the work of various theorists.
The Webbs: The Industrial Revolution caused a complete change in the way
craftspeople performed their work. They lost control of work processes to the factory
owner. This division between capital and labour allowed owners to exploit workers and
created a need for unions to regulate conditions of employment.
9
Test Bank to Accompany McQuarrie/Industrial Relations in Canada, Fourth Edition
Selig Perlman: He, too, felt that the emergence of capitalism was a catalyst for the
emergence of unions. He argued that unions would require the support of the middle
class. He saw the purpose of unions as providing collective mastery over employment
opportunities and standards.
John Commons: He identified the development of competitive markets as a force
behind unionism. In the competitive markets created by the Industrial Revolution,
workers had become separated from the distribution and sale of their work. Unions were
needed in order to take wages out of competition.
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels: They saw unions as a means by which the working
class could avoid exploitation. They went well beyond any of the other theorists in
suggesting that the ultimate goal of unions was the overthrow of the capitalist system.
52. Discuss how Dunlop took the principles of systems theory and used them to explain
how industrial relations operates.
Suggested answer:
The answer should include the following:
Dunlop considered two levels that existed within the framework of the individual
organization and with other organizations in the external environment.
Dunlop refers to three actors within the industrial relations system: Unions,
Management/Employer and Government or other stakeholders and argued that each of
these actors had a specific ideology that determined how they would act within the
system and as such would create conflicts within the systems to either counteract or
balance events occurring within the system. However the shared belief of the actors
about the value of the system itself maintains the stability within the system even if
representatives of the actors change. This allows the system to continue to function in
spite of disputes.
i)
53. How do some theorists define the role of unions as we head into the 21st century
and how do theorists suggest they adapt in order to survive sweeping changes to the
economic structure?
Suggested answer:
The answer should touch on the following points:
i) The role of unions must continue to be the improvement of working conditions for all
workers, not only their members.
ii) Unions will have to find innovative ways to minimize the effects of technological
changes on the job security of their members without trying to stifle such
advancements.
10
Test Bank to Accompany McQuarrie/Industrial Relations in Canada, Fourth Edition
iii) Unions will have to deal with the effects of globalization. By assisting in the
development of labour movements in low-wage countries, they can begin the
process of taking wages out of competition.
iv) Unions will have to make efforts to organize new areas such as high-tech and
service industries since this is where most new jobs are being created.
v) Unions must pursue an industrial relations model which leads to a cooperative
approach between the parties. The confrontational approach typical of most unionemployer relationships can only survive in a relatively monopolistic environment.
54. What are the unique features of the 14th Century craft guilds?
Answer should touch on the following:
i)
ii)
iii)
iv)
v)
vi)
vii)
viii)
Workers involved in a single trade โ weaving, woodworking, metal-works, or
pottery
Craftspeople were self employed
The output was concerned with quality rather than quantity
craftspeople had great freedom and independence to work on projects of their
own choosing
The guild provided a form of insurance
Provided continuing education to members
Quality control was a part of the consideration as the guild controlled who would
become an apprentice
Marketing was done by the craftspeople
55. Describe some of the horrors and benefits of the Industrial Revolution for workers.
Suggested answer:
i)
Transportation and communication were vastly improved.
ii)
There was mass migration from the rural areas to the cities.
iii)
Factories grew in number and size.
iv)
Production was decentralized; no one single person was responsible for the final
product.
v)
Mechanization was primarily responsible for the product which had little to do
with skill of the worker.
vi)
Control of the workplace was with the owner of the factory.
vii)
Focus was on increased production and consumption.
viii)
There was little consideration for workplace safety.
ix)
There was little concern for job satisfaction.
x)
The high cost of urban living ensured that more than one family member had to
work.
xi)
Wage rates declined.
xii)
The use of child labour was commonplace.
xiii)
If workers were injured or became sick, there were many looking to take their
place.
xiv) Many of the negative impacts of industrialization lead to unionization.
11
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