840 resultados para Trade union
Resumo:
Esta dissertação busca refletir sobre as alterações na organização do trabalho na sociedade brasileira do final do século XX, determinadas por políticas de caráter neoliberal, que demandaram alterações também nas abordagens de resistência da classe trabalhadora. Com este intuito, é estudado o processo da assim chamada globalização que trouxe elementos novos para o capitalismo da virada do século: financeirização e liberalização mundial da economia. São analisados os impactos causados no movimento sindical, através do resgate de sua história e seus processos de construção de lideranças, especialmente diante das mudanças trazidas pela reestruturação produtiva na transição híbrida de um modelo essencialmente fordista para outro, flexível, o toyotismo. O estudo foca o exemplo da categoria bancária, utilizando como referencial o Sindicato dos Bancários do Rio de Janeiro. O objeto de estudo centrou-se nos desafios gerados pela conjuntura, notadamente na formação de uma geração de sindicalistas capaz de fazer frente a um capitalismo oxigenado por tal processo de globalização. A fim de entender os desafios da formação de sindicalistas na contemporaneidade, a abordagem empírica baseia-se em entrevistas com dez dirigentes da atual Diretoria Executiva da entidade mencionada, cujo primeiro mandato iniciou nos anos 1990. A orientação metodológica tomou por base a consulta e análise de dados documentais, provenientes majoritariamente do Sindicato dos Bancários do Rio de Janeiro; da Contraf/CUT (Confederação Nacional dos Trabalhadores do Ramo Financeiro da Central Única dos Trabalhadores); do Dieese (Departamento Intersindical de Estatísticas e Estudos Sócio Econômicos), além de literatura especializada referente aos temas afins.
Determinações teórico-políticas dos sistemas de avaliação da educação superior: questões da Educação
Resumo:
O presente estudo propôs a identificação das determinações da avaliação da educação superior, com recorte na formação em Educação Física, utilizando-se das categorias do materialismo histórico e dialético. As ideologias do Capital Humano e do Capital Social e seus teóricos serviram como mediadoras dessa análise. Para tanto, utilizamo-nos do fenômeno da globalização e seus conseqüentes reflexos na sociedade brasileira em geral e na educação superior em particular. Os modelos de avaliação foram aqui examinados até a atualidade, bem como seus desdobramentos na formação em Educação Física e seu respectivo campo de trabalho, com algumas experiências ocorridas em nosso território. Tendo como caminho as propostas avaliativas, os aspectos históricos da constituição da Educação Física, os instrumentos de avaliação atuais, as avaliações internas produzidas na UFRJ e UFF e o aprofundamento das ideologias do CH e do CS, acreditamos ter evidenciado o fio condutor do estabelecimento de uma cultura conformadora e justificadora da exploração da população pelo capitalismo que acaba por ser abraçada por parcelas de professores de Educação Física quando se alinham de forma irrefletida aos modelos de avaliação. Apontamos a possibilidade de uma ação contra-hegemônica por um caminho politizador no interior das instituições escolares, em todos os seus níveis e com todos os seus atores, passando pelos movimentos sindicais e chegando principalmente à Universidade
Resumo:
Este trabalho busca analisar a nova dinâmica do processo de integração no Mercosul, caracterizada pelo tratamento de temas sociais como direitos humanos, meio ambiente, saúde e educação, indicando o avanço de uma agenda social de integração que rompe com a tradição comercialista do bloco. O avanço de governos progressistas nos países membros contribuiu para essa nova lógica integradora, tendo estimulado também o aumento dos mecanismos de participação social, abrindo espaço para uma maior presença de atores sociais nas discussões relativas à integração. É objetivo da pesquisa avaliar qual é a efetiva influência desses novos atores no Mercosul, questionando-se a possível existência de uma esfera pública transnacional. Para chegar a uma resposta, o trabalho recorre a variáveis e conceitos como déficit democrático, transparência, representatividade e faz um estudo específico das características e dos meios de articulação de duas categorias sociais no bloco: as centrais sindicais e os empresários.
Resumo:
A pesquisa tem como objeto as bases ético-políticas da organização coletiva dos professores pela sua saúde e, como objetivo, analisar como a questão da saúde dos trabalhadores foi incorporada na pauta sindical dos professores da rede básica de ensino no Brasil, a fim de desvendar concepções sobre saúde que sustentam tais reivindicações. A pergunta orientadora é: a saúde dos trabalhadores da educação tem sido incorporada na pauta sindical dos professores nos limites da reprodução da força de trabalho ou amplia-se para o plano dos direitos? Delimitou-se como campo de pesquisa a Confederação Nacional dos Trabalhadores em Educação (CNTE) por esta entidade sindical ser representativa de mais de dois milhões de trabalhadores da educação da rede básica e pública de ensino no país. Os resultados encontrados possibilitaram reconstruir historicamente o objeto, no sentido de identificar como, quando e por quais meios a entidade sindical iniciou a problematização da questão saúde/adoecimento docente como uma questão coletiva, bem como identificar o papel que a CNTE foi assimilando para si ao longo desse processo e que relações a entidade sindical percebe entre condições e trabalho dos professores e adoecimento. A classificação dos temas em saúde, quanto à sua natureza econômico-corporativa ou ético-política, apreendeu-se que concepções de saúde se fazem presentes nas fontes pesquisadas. Identificou-se que a concepção de saúde ampliada se faz presente na pauta sindical, evidenciada por um conjunto de temas considerados como pertinentes a uma natureza ético-política, notadamente, aqueles presentes na pauta que estão orientados para a defesa do Sistema Único de Saúde e a garantia da saúde por meio de políticas públicas. Contudo, os resultados também mostram que, no âmbito das necessidades provenientes das bases sindicais, ainda prevalecem reivindicações pertinentes a uma natureza econômico-corporativa, que necessárias para os trabalhadores da educação, se configuram a partir de concepções de saúde restritas, predominantemente baseadas em reivindicações por assistência médica, por meio de instituições próprias ao funcionalismo público ou planos de saúde. Neste último sentido, embora importantes, não ampliam o debate sindical no sentido de defender a saúde como direito social. A tese que se defende é que o momento ético-político, no qual se insere a luta pelos direitos sociais, tem relações imediatas com a dimensão ontológica do ser social, assim, tendo como pressuposto de que o trabalho é fundante de todas as determinações do ser social, considera-se que é na dimensão ético-política do processo saúde-doença que se deve introduzir a discussão política da saúde, e nela, a saúde dos trabalhadores a fim de se construir uma pauta contra o entendimento da saúde como uma mercadoria
Resumo:
Community unionism has emerged in the past decade as a growing strand of industrial relations research and is influencing trade union strategies for renewal. This article seeks to further develop the concept, while exploring the potential roles for unions in communities subject to projects of urban regeneration.
Resumo:
Call centres have in the last three decades come to define the interaction between corporations, governments, and other institutions and their respective customers, citizens, and members. From telemarketing to tele-health services, to credit card assistance, and even emergency response systems, call centres function as a nexus mediating technologically enabled labour practices with the commodification of services. Because of the ubiquitous nature of the call centre in post-industrial capitalism, the banality of these interactions often overshadows the nature of work and labour in this now-global sector. Advances in telecommunication technologies and the globalization of management practices designed to oversee and maintain standardized labour processes have made call centre work an international phenomenon. Simultaneously, these developments have dislocated assumptions about the geographic and spatial seat of work in what is defined here as the new international division of knowledge labour. The offshoring and outsourcing of call centre employment, part of the larger information technology and information technology enabled services sectors, has become a growing practice amongst governments and corporations in their attempts at controlling costs. Leading offshore destinations for call centre work, such as Canada and India, emerged as prominent locations for call centre work for these reasons. While incredible advances in technology have permitted the use of distant and “offshore” labour forces, the grander reshaping of an international political economy of communications has allowed for the acceleration of these processes. New and established labour unions have responded to these changes in the global regimes of work by seeking to organize call centre workers. These efforts have been assisted by a range of forces, not least of which is the condition of work itself, but also attempts by global union federations to build a bridge between international unionism and local organizing campaigns in the Global South and Global North. Through an examination of trade union interventions in the call centre industries located in Canada and India, this dissertation contributes to research on post-industrial employment by using political economy as a juncture between development studies, critical communications, and labour studies.
Resumo:
Flanders (1974) considered the Second World War to be the great social triumph and vindication of voluntarism in British industrial relations. This paper considers the experience of one region, Northern Ireland, functioning in a unique social and political context and considers the experience of its wartime industrial relations system. The political framework, trade union growth and representation, collective bargaining, strike activity including the major munitions strike of 1944 which may have provoked Defence Regulations Order 1AA, labour management and Joint Production Committees are all examined. The paper gives qualified support to Flanders’ conclusion.
Resumo:
Cooperatives, as a kind of firms, are considered by many scholars as an remarkable alternative for overcoming the economic crisis started in 2008. Besides, there are other scholars which pointed out the important role that these firms play in the regional economic development. Nevertheless, when one examines the economic literature on cooperatives, it is detected that this kind of firms is mainly studied starting from the point of view of their own characteristics and particularities of participation and solidarity. In this sense, following a different analysis framework, this article proposes a theoretical model in order to explain the behavior of cooperatives based on the entrepreneurship theory with the aim of increasing the knowledge about this kind of firms and, more specifically, their contribution to regional economic development.
Resumo:
This article examines the national and regional pressures in Northern Ireland in the post-war period for parity in public sector pay with the rest of the UK. Northern Ireland had a devolved legislature and government within the UK from 192 1 and was constitutionality in all essentially federal relationship with the rest of the UK. However, the Stormont Government chose to use legislative devolution to minimize policy differences with the rest of the UK. The article highlights the national industrial relations environment as the backdrop for provincial developments in pay setting. It establishes the important role Played by the Social Services Agreement negotiated with the Labour Government at Westminster in triggering the principle of parity in public sector pay in the early post-war years. The principle of pay parity subsequently became a benchmark for regional trade union coercive comparisons in collective bargaining across the devolved public sector. The article highlights the Policy relevance of these developments both to the UK Treasury and to devolved Governments in the UK, as they address the issue of regional public sector pay.
Resumo:
How is identity claimed, contested and sustained?
This book looks at retentions, reconstructions and reverberations of identity in a colonial Caribbean setting. It is an ‘uncomfortable’ and ‘impressionistic’ ethnography of life on the island of Montserrat leading up to and including the present day volcanic eruptions. It explores Montserrat’s existing colonial identity and emerging postcolonial identity drawing upon examples from local poets, calypsonians and historians; controversial development and trade union struggles; and the impact of tourism and colonialism on the island – Black Irish identity claims and the celebration and/or commemoration of St. Patrick’s Day in particular.
This book will appeal to Anthropologists, Sociologists, and Cultural Studies and Caribbean Studies scholars, as well as those involved in and concerned for the reconstruction of Montserrat the place and Mons’rat the people.
Resumo:
Traditionally trades unions have accepted and promoted orthodox economic growth as a policy imperative. In recent years there has been a noticeable ‘greening’ of trade unions in relation to initiatives such as the ‘Green new deal’ and the creation of ‘green collar’ employment and the focus on a ‘just transition’ to a low carbon economy. Yet given the growing evidence of the negative impacts of economic growth in terms of environmental, resource and pollution impacts as well as the inability of economic growth to tackle (as opposed to managed) socio-economic inequality, it is timely to review the case for trades unions to fundamentally rethink the commitment to orthodox economic growth. That is, for trades unions to consider going beyond their current ‘green/sustainability’ strategies to consider more radical ‘post-growth’ policy positions. This chapter will explore some of the dimensions of a ‘post-growth’ trade union agenda by considering the evidence for going beyond growth from within the trade union movement (specifically looking at the International Labor Organization’s 2004 report on Economic Security, to internal union discussions around trades unionism and climate change) and external evidence ranging from Wilkinson and Pickett’s The Spirit Level (which suggests amongst other things that in the developed world what is needed is not economic growth but greater redistribution and lowering inequality – issues also of traditional interest to the Trades Union movement) to Tim Jackson’s Prosperity without Growth (which suggests that economic growth is ecologically unsustainable as well having passed a threshold beyond which it is contributing to human well-being in the developed world). As well as discussing the relationship between trades unionism and what may be called ‘green political economy’ (such as the ‘degrowth’ and ‘limits to growth’ perspectives) this chapter will also discuss the practical/policy implications of this ‘post-growth’ perspective in relation to trades unionism’s analysis of capitalism and its transformation in the context of a climate changed, carbon constrained world, including implications for ideas such as basic income, a shorter working week and what a trades unionism focused on how to achieve high quality of life within a low carbon context might look like.
Resumo:
Using a survey of multinational companies (MNCs), we investigate the factors that determine the use and scope of financial participation in MNCs operating in Ireland. We explore the impact of six factors - country of origin, age, employment size (Irish and worldwide employment size), ownership structure, trade union recognition and sector. Descriptive results find that financial participation schemes are quite common within MNCs in Ireland. Many of these schemes are only available to higher levels of staff. Multivariate analysis reveals that five out of the six factors (the exception was sector) had varying impacts on financial participation schemes. © 2012 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.
Resumo:
Ireland is rare among advanced economies in not having statutory trade union recognition legislation for collective bargaining purposes. The matter has been a source of policy contention over the years with attempts to resolve it encapsulated in the so-called ‘Right to Bargain’ legislation, introduced in 2001. This legislation has sought to circumvent statutory recognition in Ireland by putting in place an alternative mechanism for unions to represent members in non-union firms where collective bargaining is not practiced. This review, based on a mixture of empirical and documentary evidence, demonstrates that this legislation was moderately successful for a short period in generating pay rises, improved employment conditions and better access to procedures for union members in non-unionised firms. Indeed, in some respects, it was a superior institutional mechanism to a statutory recognition regime.
Resumo:
In this article, I consider the importance of epistolary narratives in the interface of autobiography and politics. In doing this, I read the letters of Fannia Mary Cohn, a Jewish immigrant worker, trade union activist and ardent labour organizer in the garment industry in the USA in the first half of the twentieth century. Cohn was a prolific writer and political activist and left a rich body of labour literature, but never wrote an autobiography or a diary or journal. It is in her letters to her comrades and friends in the labour movement that short autobiographical stories erupt and it is on such stories across her correspondence that this article focuses. The analysis is informed by Hannah Arendt’s theorization of narratives in their interrelation with politics and history. Drawing on a rich body of feminist literature around the relational self, what I argue is that an Arendtian reading of epistolary narratives is a useful analytical tool in understanding gendered politics in the diverse histories of the labour movement.
Resumo:
The NDP was founded out of the ashes of the Co-Operative Commonwealth Federation to cooperate with the Canadian Labour Congress to become the 'political arm of organized labour' in Canada. The NDP has long claimed they are the party which represents the policy goals of organized labour in Canada: that the NDP alone will fight for trade union rights, and will fight for Canadian workers. Divergent Paths is an examination of the links between the labour movement and the ND P in an era ofneo-liberalism. Provincial NDP governments have become increasingly neoliberal in their ideological orientation, and have often proved to be no friend to the labour movement when they hold office. The Federal party has never held power, nor have they ever formed the Official Opposition. This thesis charts the progress of the federal NDP as they become more neoliberal from 1988 to 2006, and shows how this trend effects the links between the NDP and labour. Divergent Paths studies each federal election from 1988 to 2006, looking at the interactions between Labour and the NDP during these elections. Elections provide critical junctions to study discourse - party platforms, speeches, and other official documents can be used to examine discourse. Extensive newspaper searches were used to follow campaign events and policy speeches. Studying the party's discourse can be used to determine the ideological orientation of the party itself: the fact that the party's discourse has become neoliberal is a sure sign that the party itself is neoliberal. The NDP continues to drive towards the centre of the political spectrum in an attempt to gain multi-class support. The NDP seems more interested in gaining seats at any cost, rather then promoting the agenda of Labour. As the party attempts to open up to more multi-class support, Labour becomes increasingly marginalised in the party. A rift which arguably started well before the 1988 election was exacerbated during that election; labour encouraged the NDP to campaign solely on the issue of Free Trade, and the NDP did not. The 1993 election saw the rift between the two grow even further as the Federal NDP suffered major blowbacks from the actions of the Ontario NDP. The 1997 and 2000 elections saw the NDP make a deliberate move to the centre of the political spectrum which increasingly marginalised labour. In the 2004 election, Jack Layton made no attempt to move the party back to the left; and in 2006 the link between labour and the NDP was perhaps irreparably damaged when the CAW endorsed the Liberal party in a strategic voting strategy, and the CLC did not endorse the NDP. The NDP is no longer a reliable ally of organized labour. The Canadian labour movement must decide wether the NDP can be 'salvaged' or if the labour movement should end their alliance with the NDP and engage in a new political project.