This book presents a re-examination of classical issues in the relationship between different forms of democratization, civil, political and social, and examines Chile's transition to democracy during the 1990s as a typical case of the modern sequence.
LOUISE HAAGH is a British Academy Research Fellow at St Antony's College, Oxford.
List of Tables List of Figures Acknowledgements Glossary of Abbreviations Introduction PART ONE: THEORETICAL ISSUES Citizenship and Democratization Human Resources and Market Reforms PART TWO: LABOUR POLITICS AND CHILE'S TRANSITION Business Leaders and Democracy's Limits Unions, Parties and the Sacrifice for Democracy The Transition to Democracy and the Enforcement of Markets PART THREE: SOCIAL CITIZENSHIP AND CHILE'S LABOUR REFORMS Democratic Legitimation and the New Labour Code That Was Not Training Policy and De-Centralisation Labour Relations and Investment in Workers Union Strength, Union History and Union Effects Appendices Select Bibliography Index