74
TRADE UNIONISM
Federation of Labor of craft and trades unions. Nor do
these distinct structural types always appear to be quite
independent in their genesis. This happens in some cases,
but there seem to be clear cases of developmental transi
tion. Thus the compound craft union is sometimes a*
transformation of the craft union by the simple process
of combination, and the industrial union seems often to
be the outcome of a simple enlargement of the elements
in the compound craft union.
If, then, structural types stood in the same relation
ship to our problem as functional types, and if, there
fore, in order to establish the manifold character of
unionism it were necessary to apply the same criteria to
them with the same degree of stringency, there is no
doubt that the case could not be maintained. Here we
doubtless find the chief explanation for the fact that
students have yielded so long and so generally to the
popular assumption that unionism is at bottom one and
the same thing, that union variants are but adaptations
of a single norm to changing environment, or at most
temporary and accidental aberrations from it. 10 This is
the conviction with which the student of unionism would
naturally, and indeed almost inevitably, be impressed if
he entered upon the study primarily from the structural
standpoint, and placed his emphasis upon structural
forms and relationships. He would then see unionism be
ginning in the local craft organization as a response to
the conditions created by the primitive type of capitalistic
enterprise or to its corresponding market structure, and
developing by a gradual transformation through larger
10 The popular assumption seems to be in itself partly a mat
ter of blind partisanship, partly a matter of tactical advantage,
and partly a belief in things hoped for.