This article compares views among Swedish trade unions with those of their members regarding
cross-national union cooperation in Europe or the EU. Data are derived from two different surveys,
one among trade unions in 2010?2011 and the other among employees in 2006. It turns
out that trade unions are generally more affirmative than their members to transnational union
cooperation. In the employee survey, differences appear between members of the three peak-level
organizations?the LO (manual workers), the TCO (white-collar workers), and Saco (professionals).
However, controlling for education, these differences cannot be verified statistically. Higher
education?which above all Saco members have?is linked to more positive attitudes toward
transnational union cooperation. The gap between the organizations and their affiliates concerning
engagement in European issues appears to be larger in the LO than in Saco, with the TCO
somewhere in the middle.
Author Biographies
Bengt Fur?ker, Department of Sociology and Work Science, University of Gothenburg
Mattias Bengtsson, Department of Sociology and Work Science, University of Gothenburg,