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Dissonant cognitions in European works councils: a ‘comparative ethnomethodological' approach

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Article

Timming, Andrew R.

Economic and Industrial Democracy

2010

31

4

November

521-535

comparison ; European works council ; labour relations

Netherlands ; United Kingdom

Workers participation and European works councils

English

Bibliogr.

"Drawing from case study research conducted at a UK-based European works council, this article explores the dynamics of cross-national labour relations using a theoretical framework that the author calls ‘comparative ethnomethodology'. The merging of qualitatively distinct national industrial relations systems into one geographical space is identified as a key social psychological obstacle to labour internationalism. When brought together in a transnational context, workers' representatives frequently suffer from ‘dissonant cognitions' in consequence of the absence of commonly constituted ‘background assumptions'. This dynamic is exemplified by the interpersonal relations between the British and Dutch delegations in the case study European works council.The study has implications with respect to the debates on the problems, prospects and possibilities of labour internationalism. "

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