By browsing this website, you acknowledge the use of a simple identification cookie. It is not used for anything other than keeping track of your session from page to page. OK
1

Blocked and new frontiers for trade unions: contesting ‘the meaning of work' in the creative and caring sectors

Bookmarks
Article

Umney, Charles ; Coderre-LaPalme, Geneviève

British Journal of Industrial Relations

2017

55

4

December

859-878

trade union ; artist ; healthcare worker

France ; United Kingdom

Trade unionism

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bjir.12251

English

Bibliogr.

"Many jobs feature tensions between workers' own motivations, and the objectives imposed on them by management or economic imperatives. We call these tensions ‘meaning of work conflicts'. We ask whether trade unions can intervene in them, or whether they are simply too subjective to be a credible campaigning focus. We examine two professional groups in Britain and France, musicians and healthcare staff. Among musicians, workers tend to negotiate meaning of work conflicts themselves, seeing little role for unions in this process. This engenders legitimacy problems that unions have had to find ways around. By contrast, in the hospitals sector, there is more scope for unions to campaign over the meaning of work, thus potentially increasing legitimacy among staff and the public. The difference is explained by the more diffuse and fragmented nature of employer structures in music, and the more chaotic set of motivations found among music workers. "

Digital



Bookmarks