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引用次数: 1
摘要
本文以津巴布韦工会大会(Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions)创始主席、职业工会主义者阿尔弗雷德·马克瓦林巴(Alfred Makwarimba)的生平故事为例,探讨自20世纪90年代以来,在津巴布韦新自由主义的影响下,工会主义及其领导层是如何转变的。现有的学术研究集中在新自由主义时期劳工政治工会主义的各个方面。本文以这些文献为基础,探讨工人主义在这一时期的忍耐力和工会领导人的各种代理。它认为,新自由主义的转向改变了工会主义,导致政府与劳工之间以及劳工内部的持续斗争。对马克瓦林巴来说,新自由主义给了他新的能动性和相关性。本文中提供的采访数据和二手资料显示,他在20世纪90年代最大限度地利用了劳资关系的自由化,从而重振了他的工会事业,并将他的职业生涯从20世纪80年代的衰退推向了新的轨道。它还表明,虽然新自由主义确实使劳工政治激进化,但它也使工会主义民主化,使结社自由和个人能力、能力和自主权的表达得以繁荣。因此,这篇论文有助于我们理解工会主义的斗争,它从国家社团主义演变为政治工会主义,并最终出现工人主义,所有这些都被内部斗争和来自国家和资本的不断攻击所中断。
From state corporatism to workerism: Alfred Makwarimba and trade unionism in Zimbabwe under neoliberalism
ABSTRACT This article uses the life story of Alfred Makwarimba, the founding president of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions and a career trade unionist, to examine how trade unionism and its leadership in particular transformed under the impact of neoliberalism in Zimbabwe from the 1990s. Existing scholarship focusses on aspects of labour’s political unionism during neoliberalism. This paper builds on this literature by exploring the endurance of workerism and varied agency of union leaders during this period. It argues that the neoliberal turn transformed trade unionism resulting in continuous struggles between government and labour, and within labour itself. For Makwarimba, neoliberalism gave him renewed agency and relevance. Data from interviews and secondary sources presented in this paper show that he maximised on the liberalisation of labour relations during the 1990s to reinvigorate and set his trade union career on a new trajectory from the decline of the 1980s. It also shows that while neoliberalism, indeed, radicalised labour politics, it also democratised unionism, enabling the flourishment of freedom of association and expression of individual abilities, capabilities and autonomy. The paper, thus, contributes to our understanding of trade unionism’s struggles as it evolved from state corporatism to political unionism and the eventual emergence of workerism, all punctuated by internal fights, and incessant attacks from the state and capital.