Renewing New Zealand Unions: The Service And Food Workers’ Union & Living Wage Aotearoa

A. Newman, C. Jess
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

Trade unions and trade unionism are under serious threat in most industrialised countries, in what has been referred to as the ‘crisis in trade unionism’. The crisis is common to trade unions across the globe, consisting of a decline in membership and density, coupled with a loss of political influence and social standing. The crisis has been caused by changes in the political economies of the industrially developed nations. Social Movement Unionism (SMU) is one of the strategies to combat this crisis which has been embraced by unions and union movements in many of the Liberal Market Economies (LME). In the context of New Zealand, Jane Parker has looked at the possibility of SMU at a union movement level. However, at a single union level, the Service and Food Workers’ Union (SFWU) has engaged with this vision of renewal through participation in the Living Wage Movement Aotearoa New Zealand (LWANZ). This paper will seek to place the SFWU’s engagement with this campaign within a theoretical framework of union renewal; that is, a re-imagining of trade union relationships in order to (re-)gain power along various dimensions. We will further consider the SMU literature and will draw on three concepts identified by Ross in her analysis of social unionism: the ethos, or “collective action frame”; the strategies or “repertoire”; and, the “internal organisational practices”, and how these interlink with the literature on union renewal. Of particular note will be the response of both the union and non-union participants in the LWANZ to the development of their relationships, and whether and how this is contributing to the successes of LWANZ and of union renewal.
更新新西兰工会:服务和食品工人工会和生活工资改革
在大多数工业化国家,工会和工会主义受到严重威胁,这被称为“工会主义危机”。这场危机对全球工会来说都很普遍,包括会员人数和密度的下降,以及政治影响力和社会地位的丧失。这场危机是由工业发达国家的政治经济变化引起的。社会运动工会主义(SMU)是对抗这场危机的策略之一,已被许多自由市场经济(LME)的工会和工会运动所接受。在新西兰的背景下,简·帕克(Jane Parker)在工会运动层面上研究了新大的可能性。然而,在单一的工会层面,服务和食品工人工会(SFWU)通过参与新西兰的生活工资运动(LWANZ)来实现这一复兴愿景。本文将试图将SFWU与这一运动的接触置于工会更新的理论框架内;也就是说,重新设想工会关系,以便在各个方面(重新)获得权力。我们将进一步考虑新大的文献,并将借鉴罗斯在她对社会工会主义的分析中确定的三个概念:精神,或“集体行动框架”;策略或“剧目”;还有,“内部组织实践”,以及这些与工会更新文献之间的联系。特别值得注意的是LWANZ的工会和非工会参与者对其关系发展的反应,以及这是否以及如何有助于LWANZ的成功和工会的更新。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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