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Manufacturing concessions: attritionary outsourcing at General Motor's Lordstown, USA assembly plant.

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Article

Sallaz, Jeffrey J.

Work, Employment and Society

2004

18

4

December

687-708

labour relations ; labour dispute ; automobile industry ; redundancy ; outsourcing

USA

Labour relations

English

Bibliogr.

"Workers at the General Motors (GM) auto assembly factory in Lordstown, Ohio, USA, fabled in the industrial sociology literature because of their militancy during a 1972 labor dispute, have over the past decade approved a succession of contracts whittling down the labor force from 12,000 to around 3000 today. These reductions were accomplished by ‘attritionary outsourcing'. To explain why labor has accepted such job loss, this interview project with Lordstown workers extends accepted accounts of deindustrialization by considering the political, material and ideological conditions underlying concessionary bargaining. As the tactic known as ‘whipsawing' became less credible and consequential, GM turned to tactics that actively secure worker consent to job loss. Here one can see the replacement of Burawoy's hegemonic despotism by a despotic hegemony."

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