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Two Logics of Labor Organizing in the Global Apparel Industry

Two Logics of Labor Organizing in the Global Apparel Industry

Mark Anner
2009
2009

Abstract

Anner, M. (2009). Two logics of labor organizing in the global apparel industry. International Studies Quarterly53(3), 545-570.

What factors account for labor strategies in global industries? While some scholars point to economic factors and others look to political opportunity structures, an examination of union actions in the Central American apparel export industry over a 14-year period suggests that activists’ historical experiences and ideological orientations also strongly influence union dynamics. Left-oriented unions tend to form unions through transnational activism whereas conservative unions most often turn to plant-level cross-class collaboration. Moreover, these two union strategies are interconnected. Successful transnational activism facilitates conservative union formation through a “radical flank” mechanism; the threat of left-union organizing motivates employers to accept unionization by conservative unions to block left unions from gaining influence in the plant. To examine these arguments, this article employs pooled time-series statistical analysis, structured interviews with labor organizers, and process tracing that draws on nine months of field research in Honduras and El Salvador.

Article
Our Research

Abstract

Anner, M. (2009). Two logics of labor organizing in the global apparel industry. International Studies Quarterly53(3), 545-570.

What factors account for labor strategies in global industries? While some scholars point to economic factors and others look to political opportunity structures, an examination of union actions in the Central American apparel export industry over a 14-year period suggests that activists’ historical experiences and ideological orientations also strongly influence union dynamics. Left-oriented unions tend to form unions through transnational activism whereas conservative unions most often turn to plant-level cross-class collaboration. Moreover, these two union strategies are interconnected. Successful transnational activism facilitates conservative union formation through a “radical flank” mechanism; the threat of left-union organizing motivates employers to accept unionization by conservative unions to block left unions from gaining influence in the plant. To examine these arguments, this article employs pooled time-series statistical analysis, structured interviews with labor organizers, and process tracing that draws on nine months of field research in Honduras and El Salvador.

Social Movements

Labor, Transnational Social Movements

Keywords

Class, Knowledge Production, Latin America, Praxis

Theme

Popular Education; Adult Education; and Social Movement Learning

Related People

Mark Anner