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Title
Chipping away at globalisation: transnational labour organising in the semiconductor industry |
Full text
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/37295; http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/581 |
Date
2020 |
Author(s)
Saunders, Emma Louise |
Contributor(s)
Slater, Tom; Penrose, Jan; Ruwanpura, Kanchana; Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) |
Abstract
In an age of globalised, highly competitive, volatile and financialised markets, the
question of how to effectively organise workers to win concrete improvements in
their working lives is increasingly difficult to answer. This thesis builds on four years
of action-research, which supported eight unions in one company spread across five
countries, to coordinate some of their actions and to push for a Global Framework
Agreement to secure workers' associational freedoms. It highlights the difficulties
that workers face when trying to collaborate across borders and argues that any
attempt to effectively study or empower trade unions at the scale of their
multinational employer must pay attention to the specific factors which condition
their agency as well as to the goals, tactics and enactments through which the ideal
of international solidarity is embodied.
The company studied produces silicon chips, employing approximately 28,000
workers across highly capital-intensive processes of research, development and chip
production in the Global North, alongside 17,000 workers in the Global South to test
and assemble the circuits. Between 2005 and 2016, the company underwent a
process of financialisation, distributing ever larger dividends to its shareholders,
whilst decreasing capital expenditure and implementing several restructuring and
layoff plans. Faced with what they saw as an existential threat to their company's
future, seven unions from four different countries (France, Italy, Morocco and
Malaysia) organised successful joint actions to secure greater capital investments
and the replacement of the corporation's senior management team. Following this
campaign, these unions, joined by an eighth from Malta, created an international
network to exchange information and campaigned without success for the company
to sign a Global Framework Agreement. This attempt to organise across sites,
languages, cultures, and institutional contexts, I argue, acts as a microcosm of the
difficulties workers face in their efforts to exert power in a world characterised by
globalising and centralising production and intensified financialisation.
This thesis makes two contributions to labour geography and struggles for workers'
rights more broadly. First, it argues that any attempt to understand these struggles
and their chances of success must be attuned to the actually-existing conditions of
building solidarity and that these conditions cross a number of spatialities and
temporalities. The unions' international solidarity efforts were balanced on a series
of contradictory and uneven relationships. Their members were tied to specific
national interests, and their company confronted heightened pressures of scale which reverberated across the sites. Each union reflected their members' experiences and
socio-spatial positionalities, whose register crossed a number of scales and each
union was threatened and/or co-opted by corporate tactics and stood by different
ideological visions. Unless scholars and activists attend to these detailed variations
and stories, practices and studies of international labour solidarity will remain an
abstract ideal, rather than placed in the grounded and 'messy' attempt by workers'
organisations to deal with and work across multiple differences. Second, it argues
that international efforts which focus on formal processes of rule-making at the
expense of more grassroots and militant approaches stifle international collaboration.
To sustain international collaboration, instead of an institutional and 'dialogue'-
based approach, which underplays the conflict opposing workers and their
employers, trade unions should push for ambitious demands based on shared
experiences and interests and engage in truly reciprocal forms of solidarity, rather
than semi-patronising 'help' models, whilst recognising that these discussions are
traversed by each unions' local realities and ideological stances. Ultimately, this
thesis reminds us that building a sense of collective agency at the international scale
is an iterative process, necessary but difficult, facing constant threats and changing
circumstances. In the face of a global economy managed with increasing disregard
for workers' dignity and survival, let alone their power, it is vital that geographers
pay increased attention to the strategies, challenges, and achievements of unions both
on the ground, and, even if unsuccessful, over space. |
Subject(s)
internationalism; labour geography; trade unions; semiconductor; organising |
Language
en |
Publisher
The University of Edinburgh |
Type of publication
Thesis or Dissertation; Doctoral; PhD Doctor of Philosophy |
Format
application/pdf; application/pdf |
Rights
2021-08-03 |
Repository
Edinburgh - University of Edinburgh
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Added to C-A: 2020-10-05;11:26:29 |
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