Overcoming collective action problems facing Chinese workers: lessons from four protests against Walmart
2018
71
5
Oct.
1078-1105
labour movement ; workers representation ; labour dispute ; retail trade ; trade union
Trade unionism
https://doi.org/10.1177%2F0019793918784516
English
Bibliogr.
" In contrast to various structural accounts of collective inaction or short-lived contention of Chinese workers, the authors take an agency-centered approach to explain how the few sustained labor protests during closure bargaining develop against all odds. They suggest that workers' capacity to resolve collective action problems is essential to understanding why a few contending workers are able to sustain protests whereas many others fail to do so. They argue that workplace representatives and external labor activists are crucial for helping Chinese workers resolve the collective action problems that prevent the formation of sustained labor protests. Their comparative analysis of four protests against Walmart store closures—including one unusually long, one relatively sustained, and two short-lived—shows how presence and strategic capacity of workplace representatives and external labor activists shape protest duration. The authors conclude by discussing lessons learned from these cases of closure bargaining for future development of labor contention in China."
Digital;Paper
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