Workers' responses to corporate restructuring: working class disorganization/reorganization processes in Argentina's steel industry
2017
146
122-138
industrial restructuring ; labour relations ; steel worker ; trade union ; working class
Industrial economics
http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/SL2017-146008
English
Bibliogr.
"This article aims to analyze subcontracted workers' organization processes in Argentina's steel industry through an ethnographical approach. Steel industry has been largely affected by the globalization process: production has been reorganized on a new territorial basis, new productive chains have been set up and a new collective laborer has emerged. The article assumes that a global capitalist accumulation process underlies the making and remaking of labor forces and working classes, which assume particular features in diverse contexts. It analyzes those processes, pointing out to subcontracting processes in a two-fold perspective: as processes of class differentiation in working conditions, wage level, benefits and careers; and as an expression of processes of working class reorganization through collective action. The main conclusion is that in the Argentine steel industry, subcontracted workers' demands have been at the core of these rankand-file organization processes, and union leaders have been able to organize and include them in a relatively traditional unionist perspective."
Paper
The ETUI is co-funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the ETUI.