THE ESSENCE OF UNIONISM
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units to more complex structural arrangements to meet
conditions imposed primarily by economic evolution.
And so long as he looked at the union primarily as a
structural entity, and thought of aims, policies, and activi
ties as functions or means of the organic thing, he could
adopt no other than the unitary or normalistic assump
tion.
If, however, the primary and essential union expres
sion is functional, and if it is further true that functional
variations may exist regardless of any structural quali
fications whatever—the same functional variant making
use of different structural forms without losing its iden
tity or permanency, and, contrariwise, distinct and con
tradictory functional variants working through the same
structural arrangements—it is evident that this appear
ance of things would be far from conclusive of the real
character of unionism. Doubtless entire absence of dis
tinct structural types would render impossible positive
proof of the nonunitary character of unionism, but it is
evident that the tests which need be applied to prove their
existence in harmony with this hypothesis are not the
same as in the case of the functional types. Absolute
rivalry is not essential. It is sufficient if the modes of
organization be vitally different in principle. In short,
the tests of distinct structural types demanded by our
hypothesis seem to be merely the contemporary and his
torical presence in the union complex of distinct and
alternative forms of organization.
To recapitulate, then, briefly in regard to the nature of
the problem involved in the assumption that unionism is
nonunitary in character : It has been seen that this as
sumption is one which rests almost exclusively on the
existence and persistence of functional union types.