When workers matter most: a study of worker cooperatives and the prioritization of workers through COVID-19

Olga Prushinskaya, Jamie Pockrandt, Julian McKinley, Melissa A Hoover
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

PurposeAs a part of the authors’ continued efforts to understand the experience and trends related to small business cooperatives, the US Federation of Worker Cooperatives (USFWC) and the Democracy at Work Institute (DAWI) explored themes around the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on worker cooperatives and democratic workplaces.Design/methodology/approachThe USFWC and DAWI conduct a biannual Economic Census of worker cooperatives and democratic workplaces. Survey themes this year included questions around the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on individual firms.FindingsGeneral findings indicate that worker cooperatives experienced financial losses similar to conventional small businesses, but that this varied widely by industry. Although it has been found that BIPOC-owned conventional small businesses have been some of the hardest hit during the pandemic, the authors find that there may be some mitigating protective effects of the worker cooperative form when the authors explore the impacts on worker cooperatives with a majority BIPOC workforce. Additionally, the authors find that worker cooperatives and democratic workplaces strive to ensure the safety and wellbeing of their workers even when facing significant financial challenges throughout the pandemic.Research limitations/implicationsThis research utilizes non-random convenience sampling in data collection. The outreach for our biannual Economic Census is concentrated on a highly connected worker cooperative and democratic workplace network, the experiences of which may not generalize to the larger worker cooperative and democratic workplace landscape. Additionally, outreach efforts were hindered by challenges presented by the pandemic that were not present in prior census years, as was firm bandwidth to respond, which likely affected the sample composition in comparison to prior years.Originality/valueWorker cooperatives have been proven to be a resilient crisis response form of business, but little is known about how the worker cooperative ecosystem in the United States is faring in the face of the continuing COVID-19 crisis.
当工人最重要时:关于工人合作社和在COVID-19期间优先考虑工人的研究
作为作者继续努力了解与小企业合作社有关的经验和趋势的一部分,美国工人合作社联合会(USFWC)和工作中的民主研究所(DAWI)围绕COVID-19大流行对工人合作社和民主工作场所的影响探讨了主题。设计/方法/方法USFWC和DAWI对工人合作社和民主工作场所进行两年一次的经济普查。今年的调查主题包括有关COVID-19大流行对个别公司影响的问题。调查结果总体调查结果表明,工人合作社经历的财务损失与传统小企业相似,但不同行业的情况差异很大。虽然发现BIPOC拥有的传统小企业在大流行期间受到的打击最为严重,但作者在探讨对以BIPOC为主要劳动力的工人合作社的影响时发现,工人合作社形式可能具有一些减轻保护作用。此外,作者发现,工人合作社和民主工作场所即使在整个大流行期间面临重大财务挑战时,也努力确保工人的安全和福祉。研究局限性/启示本研究在数据收集中采用非随机方便抽样。我们一年两次的经济普查的外展集中在高度联系的工人合作社和民主工作场所网络上,其经验可能无法推广到更大的工人合作社和民主工作场所景观。此外,大流行病带来的挑战阻碍了外联工作,而这些挑战在以前的人口普查年份是不存在的,应对的坚定带宽也是如此,与前几年相比,这可能影响了样本组成。创意/价值工人合作社已被证明是一种有弹性的危机应对业务形式,但人们对美国工人合作社生态系统在面对持续的COVID-19危机时的表现知之甚少。
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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