从退出到发声的车间治理:公司工会的案例

From Exit to Voice in Shopfloor Governance: The Case of Company Unions

Business History Review · 1995
被引 29 · 同刊同年前 4%
ABS 4

中文导读

研究了1920年代美国公司工会如何作为工人表达车间不满的机制,替代了离职退出,并发现其提升了生产率和安全,对劳资双方都有利。

Abstract

The company union movement in the United States during the 1920s cannot be understood entirely in terms of employers' efforts either to block independent unionization or to foster greater worker loyalty through the paternalistic provisions of “welfare capitalism.” Company unions were institutional mechanisms by which workers voiced their concerns about shopfloor conditions to employers instead of exiting the firm. Evidence suggests that company unions led to both enhanced shopfloor productivity and safety, and were thus mutually beneficial for labor and management. Interestingly, however, the process by which they emerged was filled with conflict, historical contingency, and unintended consequences. Company unions were neither an inevitable nor even an intentional replacement for voluntary quits as a mechanism for addressing workers' shopfloor discontent.

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