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Forging New Labor Activism in Global Commodity Chains in Latin America

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 November 2007

Mark Anner
Affiliation:
Pennsylvania State University

Abstract

International industrial restructuring has fomented a decline in unionization in Latin America and has forced labor organizations to pursue new forms of activism. Due to the segmentation of the production process and the dispersion of the locations of production sites, the coordination of collective action has become more difficult. At the same time, labor law reforms have failed to respond to the challenges presented by market-oriented industrial reforms. As a result, labor activists are resorting to new or modified forms of labor organizing, ranging from domestic cross-class collaboration to international alliances and sporadic campaigns with labor and nongovernmental organizations. The sources of this variation in new labor actions can be found not only in contemporary political and economic contexts, but also in labor histories and ideational influences. An exploration of labor actions in the Salvadoran export apparel sector and the Brazilian automobile industry illustrates these processes.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The International Labor and Working-Class History Society 2007

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References

NOTES

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49. Anner, “Between Solidarity and Fragmentation.”

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79. Jornal de Comissão de VW, São Bernardo, November 2001.

80. Volkswagen agreed to provide a new production model to the plant and a job stability clause. The union's concession to the company was to accept the reactivation of the Volkswagen Week, which accounted for 57.62 percent of the company's savings.

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84. When it became clearer that the plant might close in July 1999, the union organized an occupation that lasted for twelve days. CUT unionists felt affected by what might happen in Ipiranga, because the other two major Ford plants were organized by the CUT and members of the Ford-Ipiranga factory commission were sympathizers of the CUT.

85. Interview with author, December 13, 2001, São Paulo.

86. Anner, “Between Solidarity and Fragmentation.”