Economic and Industrial Democracy
Economic and Industrial Democracy
2025
1-22
trade unionization ; working conditions ; manufacturing industry
Trade unionism
https://doi.org/10.1177/0143831X251334722
English
Bibliogr.
This article analyzes working conditions and attitudes of white-collar workers in the manufacturing sector, as well as the efforts of trade unions to organize this group of employees in three European countries—Finland, France, and Germany. Organizing white-collar workers has become a major issue for manufacturing trade unions because of their growing proportion in the sector's workforce. The study is based on an analysis of European secondary data sets, a survey on white-collar attitudes, and workshops with trade unionists in the countries investigated. Although white-collar workers traditionally are said to be reluctant to join trade unions, ambivalence towards their working conditions and rather positive assessments of trade unions offer some starting points for organizing. Trade unions have developed different activities to organize white-collar workers, which are closely related to the different institutional and organizational conditions in which they operate. These activities still lack strategic decisions to prioritize white-collar organizing.
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