DLCLNov 10, 2025

Quantifying the Impact of CU: A Systematic Literature Review

arXiv:2511.07491v1
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This is an incremental analysis for scholars of labor movements, clarifying theoretical debates without testing efficacy.

The paper investigates why Community Unionism (CU) has gained prominence by analyzing its construction and contestation in scholarly literature, revealing its dual genealogy and tensions between coalition-building and class politics.

Community Unionism has served as a pivotal concept in debates on trade union renewal since the early 2000s, yet its theoretical coherence and political significance remain unresolved. This article investigates why CU has gained such prominence -- not by testing its efficacy, but by mapping how it is constructed, cited, and contested across the scholarly literature. Using two complementary systematic approaches -- a citation network analysis of 114 documents and a thematic review of 18 core CU case studies -- I examine how CU functions as both an empirical descriptor and a normative ideal. The analysis reveals CU's dual genealogy: positioned by British scholars as an indigenous return to historic rank-and-file practices, yet structurally aligned with transnational social movement unionism. Thematic coding shows near-universal emphasis on coalition-building and alliances, but deep ambivalence toward class politics. This tension suggests CU's significance lies less in operationalising a new union model, and more in managing contradictions -- between workplace and community, leadership and rank-and-file, reform and radicalism -- within a shrinking labour movement.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes