A battle between titans? Rio Tinto and union recognition in Australia's iron ore industry
Economic and Industrial Democracy
2014
35
1
February
185-200
collective bargaining ; mining ; multinational enterprise ; multinational bargaining ; trade union recognition
Trade unionism
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0143831X12472243
English
Bibliogr.
"In 2010, under pressure from newly unionised rail workers, the multinational mining company Rio Tinto agreed to bargain collectively with a union for the first time in its Australian iron ore operations since 1993. This re-unionisation of part of Rio Tinto was, for unionists, an impressive feat but, in itself, the campaign was familiar enough. What makes this empirically significant is the ‘titanic' nature of the struggle in this vital sector. Its wider significance lies in a contribution to debate about ‘successful' campaigns and in highlighting the importance of both national regulation and local context to these outcomes. More broadly still, this successful campaign poses questions about how we relate such episodes to ongoing failures elsewhere."
Paper
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