146 resultados para Combative Unionism
Resumo:
No início do século XX, as relações entre Brasil e Portugal ganharam novas perspectivas. Grupos de intelectuais e políticos de ambas as nações resolveram se unir com o objetivo de tentar criar uma comunidade Luso-brasileira. Logo, uma série de iniciativas e campanhas começaram a surgir, como a elaboração de um Acordo luso-brasileiro, incentivos da Sociedade de Geografia de Lisboa, e a criação de periódicos que discutissem temas relacionados com a temática Brasil-Portugal, dentre os quais se destacaram a revista Atlântida, Mensario artistico, Literario e Social para Portugal e Brasil. Em contrapartida a esse projeto de união, havia grupos que se manifestavam de forma contrária, proferindo discursos nacionalistas e criando uma cultura completamente anti-lusitana. O Brasil, que outrora fora uma colônia portuguesa, não tinha intenções de reviver aqueles tempos sob o domínio lusitano. Os setores mais radicais do nacionalismo viam o português como o elemento indesejado. Para disseminar seu pensamento, o artifício da imprensa também foi utilizado por esses grupos, através de jornais e periódicos de cunho anti-lusitano representado neste trabalho pela revista Gil Blás. A presente dissertação se constrói nesse cenário de oposição: a lusofilia versus a lusofobia em torno do projeto de união Brasil-Portugal no período delimitado entre os anos de 1909 a 1920.
Resumo:
Este trabalho tem por objetivo explorar e mostrar de que maneira, um sindicato conhecido dentre sua categoria como conservador, agiu durante o período da ditadura militar brasileira. Para tanto, serão examinadas as fontes produzidas pela instituição e serão problematizados a partir destas leituras, algumas posições tomadas por tal sindicato no recorte entre 1968 e 1978. A história de fundação e construção de um sindicato docente num Brasil assolado por uma ditadura militar, as lutas sindicais que aconteceram no pré e durante o golpe militar, o aprofundamento no exame do comportamento colaboracionista da UPPE e a contextualização deste comportamento com a conjuntura política da época, serão pontos explorados no trabalho
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:
This article provides an analysis of resistance to neoliberalism and commodification in the public healthcare sector as seen from a trade union perspective. It uses recent research on social-movement unionism and new labour internationalism to structure a series of case studies examining resistance to different dimensions of healthcare commodification in four countries. The range of alliances trade unions are making do not fit tidily into one model, but give insights into the movement elements of trade unionism. This dimension must be strengthened, but can also be in tension with collective bargaining and other institutional processes. How to constantly reconcile these different positions is the future challenge facing trade unions.
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:
This text presents an analysis of aggregated membership’s dynamics for Spanish trade unions, using ECVT data, as well as union memberships’ trajectories, or members’ decisions about joining the organization, permanency and responsibilities, and subsequent attrition. For the analysis of trajectories we make use of information of the records of actual memberships and the record of quitting of CCOO, and of a survey-questionnaire to a sample of leavers of the same union. This study allows us to confirm a linkage between the decision and motivations to become union member, to participate in union activities, the time of permanency, and the motives to quit the organization. We also identify five types of union members’ trajectories, indicating that, far from views that assert a monolithic structure, unions are complex organizations.
Resumo:
This article examines the complex interactions between British national identity and the territorial identities of Northern Ireland and Scotland. We argue that the current literature on national identities in Britain misunderstands the nature of British identities in Northern Ireland and Scotland. Indeed, much of this literature wrongly defines Unionists in both of these areas. By examining the content of British national identity, a comparison of Scotland and Northern Ireland reveals that Unionism finds political significance through an ideological project committed to the Union. However, we also have to account for the differences in the Unionist ideology of Scotland and Northern Ireland. We argue that the institutional framework in which these identities and ideologies are exercised explains this variation. Overall, we argue that the debate on nationalism in the United Kingdom has not adequately shown how the integrative functions of British national identity can co-exist with the separatist nature of territorial national identity.
Resumo:
What role does public civic space in Belfast city centre play in the negotiation of different political identities within the city? Focusing on key public events in this space the paper traces shifts in identity practices and focuses on negotiations over the uses of public space associated with Irish nationalism and British unionism. This, it is argued, gives a more sophisticated understanding of different types of ‘shared space’. The events probed are seen as precursors and possibly drivers of political change. It is concluded that the increased sharing of civic space has probably contributed to improved political relations within the city, though there remains the challenge of
understanding how public space might more effectively be used to influence
relationships between the city’s political identities in the longer term.
Resumo:
Historians of Ireland have devoted considerable attention to the Presbyterian origins of modern Irish republicanism in the 1790s and their overwhelming support for the Union with Great Britain in the 1880s. On the one hand, it has been argued that conservative politics came to dominate nineteenth-century Presbyterianism in the form of Henry Cooke who combined conservative evangelical religion with support for the established order. On the other hand, historians have long acknowledged the continued importance of liberal and radical impulses amongst Presbyterians. Few historians of the nineteenth century have attempted to bring these two stories together and to describe the relationship between the religion and politics of Presbyterians along the lines suggested by scholars of Presbyterian radicalism in the last quarter of the eighteenth century. This article argues that a distinctive form of Presbyterian evangelicalism developed in the nineteenth century that sought to bring the denomination back to the theological and spiritual priorities of seventeenth-century Scottish and Irish Presbyterianism. By doing so, it encouraged many Presbyterians to get involved in movements for reform and liberal politics. Supporters of ‘Covenanter Politics’ utilised their denominational principles and traditions as the basis for political involvement and as a rhetoric of opposition to Anglican privilege and Catholic tyranny. These could be the prime cause of Presbyterian opposition to the infringement of their rights, such as the marriage controversy and the Disruption of the Church of Scotland in the early 1840s, and they could also be employed as a language of opposition in response to broader social and political developments, such as the demands for land reform stimulated by the agricultural depression that accompanied the Famine. Despite their opposition to ascendancy, however, the Covenanter Politics of Presbyterian Liberals predisposed them towards pan-protestant unionism against the threat of ‘Rome Rule’.
Resumo:
One of the enduring illusions about Northern Ireland is that its society can be conceptualized through a binary distinction between protestant and catholic. unionist and nationalist. It is increasingly apparent that these broad domains are themselves fractured and diverse and that otherness is often conceived from within rather than without. Northern Ireland can also be viewed as a laboratory for identity formation as unionists and loyalists strive to reconcile themselves with the fundamental political changes that have followed in the wake of the Peace Process. This paper considers one aspect of the contestation of belonging that increasingly characterizes unionism. It examines the competition for the ownership of the mythology of the Battle of the Somme ( 1916), long a key event in the unionist narrative. In particular, the paper addresses the ways in which paramilitary organizations are using the Somme to legitimate their own activities but also to distance the loyalist working classes from the former hegemonic Britishness of official unionism and the sectarianism of the Orange Order. The analysis concludes that loyalist identity is being conceptualized thorough a narrative of betrayal from within and at an intensely localized scale.
Resumo:
This article provides a discussion of the political thinking of John P. Mackintosh (1929–1978) around the debate over Scottish devolution, and the constitutional reform of the UK, during the 1960s and 1970s. The article explores Mackintosh's ‘Union State’ vision of the UK and connects this to his interest in, and study of, the Northern Ireland experience of devolution from 1921 to 1972. It also considers the significance of Mackintosh's confrontations with Scottish nationalism and suggests that his unionism was representative of a more authentic and rooted tradition than is usually acknowledged. The article offers an evaluation of Mackintosh's legacy and considers the extent to which the questions he posed, and the lines of argument he advanced, have retained their relevance and interest in the new context of partial devolution in the UK, and in the current period of renewed constitutional speculation and debate over the future of the Union and the UK.
Resumo:
This paper illuminates the role of political language in a peace process through analysing the discourse used by political parties in Northern Ireland. What matters, it seems, is not whether party discourses converge or diverge but rather how, and in what ways, they do so. In the case of Northern Ireland, there remains strong divergence between discourses regarding the ethos of unionist and nationalist parties. As a consequence, core definitions of identity, culture, norms and principle remain common grounds for competition within nationalism and unionism. There has, however, been a significant shift towards convergence between unionist and nationalist parties in their discourses on power and governance, specifically among the now predominant (hardline) and the smaller (moderate) parties. The argument thus elaborated is that political transition from conflict need not necessarily entail the creation of a “shared discourse” between all parties. Indeed, points of divergence between parties’ discourses of power and ethos are as important for a healthy post-conflict democratic environment as the elements of convergence between them.