7 resultados para Labour unions
em Universitätsbibliothek Kassel, Universität Kassel, Germany
Resumo:
Due to its transition from the socialist mode of production to the capitalist mode, workers in China have been exposed to the exploitative class relations that they hardly experienced before. The working class is now assuming a subordinate position in the relations of production while the capitalist class remains in the dominant position. As a consequence, workers’ protests are constantly emerging and class conflicts are exacerbating in the contemporary China. I have set out to study in this paper how the party-state in China contains labour unrest through the All China Federation of Trade Unions (the ACFTU), which I argue is a state apparatus that performs the ideological, political and economic functions in different situations. There has been an ongoing academic debate on if the ACFTU is defending workers’ interests. Some scholars have expressed optimism while some have taken a dim view. Drawing on Poulantzas’ theory of capitalist state, I hope to make contribution to this debate by demonstrating that the ACFTU is under some circumstances serving the short term interests of workers as individuals, but not the economic and political interests of workers as a class. Instead of organizing workers to overcome the effects of isolation or forming a class for itself, the ACFTU attempts to contain labour unrest and reproduce their subordination in the relations of production.
Resumo:
Arbeitszeitpolitik und Arbeitszeitgestaltung haben seit dem Tarifkompromiss im Jahre 1984 in der Metall-, und Elektroindustrie in der politischen und wissenschaftlichen Diskussion einen immensen Bedeutungszuwachs erfahren. Die Forderungen nach einer flexibleren Arbeitszeitgestaltung haben zeitgleich sowohl aus der Globalisierungsdiskussion und der Debatte um die Wettbewerbsfähigkeit des "Wirtschaftsstandorts Deutschland" heraus wie auch aus beschäftigungspolitischen Gründen neuen Auftrieb bekommen. Die Diskussion um die Arbeitszeit ist gleichzeitig von verschiedenen, meist gegensätzlichen Interessen geprägt: Auf der Beschäftigtenseite zielt die Arbeitszeitflexibilisierung nach wie vor auf Zeitsouveränität: d.h. auf eine bessere Vereinbarkeit der Arbeitszeit mit allen Aktivitäten außerhalb der Arbeitszeit ab. Demgegenüber stellt die Arbeitgeberseite den betriebswirtschaftlichen Aspekt in den Vordergrund. D.h. die Anpassung der Arbeitszeit an den tatsächlichen Arbeitsanfall. So soll durch aufeinander abgestimmte Gestaltung von Betriebszeit und Arbeitszeit die Erhöhung der Produktivität und die Sicherung der Wettbewerbsfähigkeit erzielt werden. Durch diesen Trend verlor das sog. Normalarbeitsverhältnis an Allgemeingültigkeit und die Flexibilisierung der Arbeitszeiten nahm seit langem kontinuierlich zu. Folge ist, dass mittlerweile eine breite Palette von Arbeitszeitmodellen existiert, in denen die gesetzlich und vertraglich vereinbarte Wochenarbeitszeit in den Dimensionen Lage, Länge und Verteilung flexibilisiert wird. Auch die Tarifverhandlungen und Auseinandersetzung der Tarifparteien zur Arbeitszeitpolitik sind dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass die Arbeitszeitflexibilisierung und Verlagerung der Tarifpolitik auf betriebliche Ebene einen Bedeutungszuwachs bekam und die Meinungsführerschaft in Sachen Arbeitszeitgestaltung von der IG Metall zu Gesamtmetall wechselte. Ziel der vorliegenden Dissertation war es, anhand einer empirisch-historischen Untersuchung über Einstellungen sowie Strategien von Gesamtmetall und IG Metall die Gestaltungsspielräume flexibler Arbeitszeitmodelle zu bestimmen und gleichzeitig die Defizite herauszuarbeiten. Die Untersuchung gründete sich in erster Linie auf die Dokumentenanalyse von Stellungnahmen der Gesamtmetall und IG-Metall-Leitungsgremien sowie Primär- und Sekundäranalyse von Befragungen der Beschäftigten. Die leitende Frage der Untersuchung war, ob es den Arbeitgeberverbänden und den Gewerkschaften gelingen konnte, die Erfordernisse eines Betriebes und die Belange der Beschäftigten weitgehend in Übereinstimmung zu bringen? Und (wenn ja) unter welchen Voraussetzungen die neuen flexiblen Arbeitszeitsysteme mit den betrieblichen und außerbetrieblichen Interessen der Beschäftigten zu vereinbaren sind. Den Hintergrund für diese Zielerreichung bildete der gesellschaftliche Konflikt zwischen Arbeit und Kapital. Denn die Schwierigkeit bzw. Komplexität lag in der Frage, wie die unterschiedlichen Interessen, die sich in der industriekapitalistischen Gesellschaft durch den Gegensatz "Kapital" und "Arbeit" bestimmen lassen, zu vereinbaren waren bzw. sind.
Resumo:
Given the substantial and increasing encroachment of trade agreements into almost every aspect of economic and social life, there is a pressing need for research that provides a more coherent framework for understanding the source and effectiveness of organised labour ’s power and capacity to influence international trade policy. Taking the union protests against the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) as a case study, this research uses core concepts derived from social movement theory to analyse the opportunities that existed for unions to influence these trade negotiations and their capacity to identify and take advantage of such opportunities. Importantly, it adds a power analysis designed to reveal the sources of power that unions draw on to take action. The research demonstrates that even where unions faced considerable constraints they were able to re-frame trade issues in a way that built broad support for their position and to utilise opportunities in the trade negotiation process to mobilise resistance against the GATS and further liberalisation of services. The theoretical framework developed for the research provides conceptual tools that can be developed for improving strategic campaign planning and for analytical assessment of past campaigns. The theoretical framework developed for this research has potential for further application as an analytical and strategic planning tool for unions.
Resumo:
This paper analyses the determinants for rural Ecuadorian households to participate in community works, to exchange labour, and to use paid labour. The results show that participation in community work is more common among indigenous peoples who are more committed with community and live in areas with relatively high population densities. Exchange labour agreements are more common among indigenous households settled in areas where industrial agriculture has not penetrated yet. Instead, paid labour is used by small and educated households which have access to credit.
Resumo:
A new collection of Case studies about gender and trade unions in nine countries, ranging from Turkey to India, Brazil to Africa, the Philippines and New Zealand. Researched and written by insider/outsider union activists and officers, the book is the culmination of five years of collaborative research by the Global Labour University Gender and Trade Unions Research Group.
Resumo:
This paper explores the relationship between migrant leaders and labour rights activists starting with the acknowledgment that this is often a source of frustration for all subjects involved. The collaboration between organisations of migrants and those of workers is not always smooth and truly collaborative, yet foreign workers have an increasing importance in the negotiation of better labour rights in Europe. The topic is discussed by taking the case of migrant domestic labour in Italy and the experience of Italian and Filipino organisation leaders who campaign for better rights in this sector. The discussion will be developed by bringing together the perspectives of three key actors in the field: trade unions, Christian labour organisations, and Filipino women's groups. Through the analysis of indepth interviews with women representatives of these organisations, impediments in the collaborations among them will be discussed, including difficulties in identifying an egalitarian method for pursuing common goals together, lack of 'trust' in the good-will of labour organisations from the side of migrants, and finally, the limits of what will be called 'bridge-persons', i.e. trade unionists with migrant backgrounds who are expected to facilitate the connection between the two groups.
Resumo:
In recent decades there has been a transformation of two central concepts of modernity – labour and the household. Ela Bhatt – the founder of the Self-Employed Women’s Association of India (SEWA), has made an important contribution to this transformation. Through the emergence of unions such as SEWA, the notion of who represents labour is being broadened; the marginalised are finding an institutional voice. Increasingly, the household is being recognised as a site of both production and reproduction. SEWA is not a traditional trade union that aims, through collective bargaining with an employer, to improve its members’ wages and working conditions as sellers of their labour power. Instead, it aims to empower women economically in the informal economy by bringing them into the mainstream economy as owners of their labour. The union dimension of SEWA builds their collective power through struggle; the cooperative dimension translates their bargaining power into the economic and social development of its members and their community. Besides, Bhatt’s approach to the self-employed was a direct challenge to the ILO’s tripartism when it was established in the early seventies. The first part of the paper provides a short biography of Ela Bhatt, describes the origins of SEWA, analyses a ‘classification struggle’ over how and who is to define what a worker is. In the second part the author considers SEWAs innovative organizing strategy and is rethinking modernity in the labour context. In the conclusion the paper discusses the lessons that can be learnt from Ela Bhatt.