Ideology and Industrial Relations in New Zealand
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.26686/nzjir.v1i2.2113Abstract
It is a truism that there is in New Zealand culture a widespread if inarticulate suspicion of ideas, of theory, of ideology and a general preference for the practically useful, for the matter-of-fact treatment of things, for the pragmatic. While the polarisation of theory and practice is not a logically sustainable one — pragmatism after all is based on some theory, some system or principle purporting to explain or predict relationships between events — nevertheless it has in New Zealand a strong emotive appeal that can be used to stigmatise those who profess a particular ideology or who dabble in the ‘unreal’ world of ideas.Downloads
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Published
1976-08-01
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Copyright of published articles is held by the Foundation for Industrial Relations Research and Education.