Please answer three questions in essay format
Each answer should be 1 – 2 pages in length, 12 font, double spaced, and written in an essay format (introduction, conclusion, and body of the answer is written in paragraphs). Only course materials (textbook, lecture notes & videos) are allowed. Answers that include external material will receive a 0 grade.
Question 1. What is work-related stress? What are some consequences of work-related stress and ways to reduce work-related stress? materials you can use are list below:
HealthlinkBC link
https://www.healthlinkbc.ca/health-topics/ta5662spec
QUESTION2. What are the benefits and disadvantages of unions? Are all unions the same?
The Winnipeg General Strike 1919URL
: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pVKo6xEgjaI&t=196s
What have unions done for us link:
https://www.ppwc.ca/what-have-unions-done-for-us/
QUESTION3. Reflecting on your current job (or, if you are not currently working, your previous job, or one of your parents’ jobs), how has technology impacted your workplace and work experiences?
The future of work: is your job safe? | The EconomistURL
: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gUc5oN_ffRo
Could driverless vehicles spell the end of the road for truck drivers?URL
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFPirumpuBc
DO NOT USE OUTSIDE SOURCE, CITE ALL THE MATERIAL PLEASE.
Chapter
1
4
Job Satisfaction, Alienation, and Work-Related Stress
1
Copyright © 2021 Nelson Education Ltd.
Prepared by
Karen D. Hughes,
Harvey J. Krahn,
and Harleen Padda, University of Alberta
Copyright © 2015 Nelson Education Ltd.
1
Outline
Job Satisfaction and Dissatisfaction
Work and Alienation
Work and Stress
2
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2
1. Job Satisfaction and Dissatisfaction
3
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Job Satisfaction
Typically measured in North America through surveys
Standard question
“In general, how satisfied are you with your job?” (p. 418 of text)
Concerns
Percentage of “satisfied” depends on response categories
Behaviours may be a more valid measure (e.g., strikes, quitting, absenteeism)
More probing questions on specific facets of job may be needed
4
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4
Figure 14.1
Job Satisfaction, Canada, 2016
5
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5
Age and Job Satisfaction
Older workers more satisfied than younger workers
Individualistic and structural explanations
Aging effect
Cohort
Life-cycle effect
Job effect
Self-selection
6
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6
Gender and Job Satisfaction
Little difference between men and women in self-reported job satisfaction
Women socialized to expect fewer intrinsic and extrinsic rewards?
Women satisfied with lower-quality jobs?
Types of jobs women hold and roles women have outside the workplace are important
Gender differences in work orientations not as significant
7
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7
Education and Job Satisfaction
Higher education = better job = more satisfaction?
A human capital explanation
Better educated workers with higher expectations regarding careers?
Job satisfaction “somewhat higher” for highly educated Canadian workers
BUT high- and low-educated, blue-collar workers in same job report similar satisfaction
Underemployment, job insecurity impact job satisfaction?
8
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8
Work Rewards, Work Orientations, and Job Satisfaction
Most satisfying conditions?
Take into account pay, benefits, promotion opportunities, job security, autonomy, skill use, satisfying social relationships, work organization features, job task design characteristics
Frederick Herzberg: extrinsic & intrinsic rewards
Hygiene factors: pay, supervisory style
Motivators: opportunity to develop skills, make decisions
Example: Arne Kalleberg’s six dimensions of work
Fit or mismatch matters.
9
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9
Work Orientation: Work–Reward Gap
Gaps between what workers desire and what they get (both intrinsic and extrinsic rewards)
Many Canadian workers report gaps between what they value and have in a job.
Bigger gap on extrinsic features (e.g., income and benefits)
Smaller gap on flexible schedule
10
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10
Figure 14.2
Availability of Most Important Job Characteristic, Canadian Labour Force, 2015*
11
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11
Consequences of Job Satisfaction & Dissatisfaction
Why do people stay in “bad” jobs?
Pay, hours, location, coworkers
Difficulty finding another job
Rationalizing coming in late, calling in sick
Overt acts of defiance
Example: theft of company property
Satisfaction and productivity?
Weak relationship
Why?
12
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12
2. Work and Alienation
13
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Work and Alienation
Alienation: “human condition resulting from an absence of fulfilling work” (p. 430 of text)
Marx’s structural analysis
Alienation from product, others involved in labour process, activity of work, themselves
“Condition of objective powerlessness”
Assumptions
Workers have no control over conditions of work.
Alienation is traced to organization of work under capitalism.
Alienation exists even if workers don’t recognize it.
14
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14
Social-Psychological Perspectives on Alienation
Melvin Seeman
“Emphasized workers’ feelings of powerlessness, meaninglessness, social isolation, self-estrangement, and normlessness” (p. 430 of text)
Self-identity and mental health
Sources of alienation
Technologies
Bureaucracies
Modern mass society
Alienation of job dissatisfaction?
15
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15
Richard Sennett on the Corrosion of Character
Loss of order, stability, and routine
Restructuring, flexibility, reliance on nonstandard workers
Loss of individual identities
Conflict between character and experience
“Who in society needs me?”
Attributed to new forms of work organization, less stable divisions of labour
NOT capitalist relations of production
16
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16
Costos & Fleming: Self-Alienation
Another form of postmodern alienation
Strong feelings that they cannot be themselves at work
Dis-identification
Workers try to separate their more authentic selves away from work from the roles they are required to perform at work
When unsuccessful, they become self-alienated
17
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17
3. Work and Stress
18
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Work and Stress: Definitions
Work-related stress
Physical and mental symptoms
Difficult to measure independent of job dissatisfaction
Burnout: individual unable to cope with job
Stressors
Objective situations (e.g., noisy work environment)
Events (e.g., dispute with supervisor)
“An individually experienced negative reaction to a job or work environment” (p. 433)
19
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19
Prevalence of Work-Related Stress (WRS)?
Work-related stress in 2015: “In the past 12 months, how often did you experience stress in your job?”
15% answered, “Always.”
37% answered, “Often.”
Work-related stress in 2010
27% of working adults reported most days “quite”/“extremely” stressful
Both surveys show a sizeable minority of people feel seriously stressed by their work.
20
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20
Causes & Consequences of
Work-Related Stress
Stressors include
job insecurity, exposure to health and safety hazards, working in physically uncomfortable settings, shift work, long hours
organizational restructuring, new management approaches (e.g., Ontario nurses)
supervisors, bullying in the office
sexual harassment and forms of discrimination
Consequences include
physical reactions, mental health
21
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21
Person–Environment Fit Model I
“Stress results when there is a significant gap between an individual’s needs and abilities and what the job offers, allows, or demands” (Edwards and Shipp, 2007; p. 435 of text).
Example: stress and burnout among social workers and teachers
Considers work orientations
Individualistic focus
How can organizational structures be changed to reduce stress and increase satisfaction?
22
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22
Person–Environment Fit Model II
“When I worked full-time, I felt very guilty about the children. If they were sick and I went to work, I felt guilty. If I stayed home with them, I felt guilty about work. Part-time work could offer the flexibility that full-time work cannot” (p. 435 of text).
23
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23
Karasek’s “Demand–Control”
Model I
Job demands and worker control
Stressors = job demands
Active and passive jobs
Active: high decision-making potential
Passive: low decision-making potential
High psychological demands + low control = stress (+ potential for physical and psychological ill health)
24
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24
Karasek’s “Demand–Control”
Model II
“They count on high turnover because of the way this business is run, there is a very high burnout level. People burn out quickly because of the stress, because of the pressure, because of the way people are treated, because of the degrading nature of the work” (call-centre worker, p. 437 of text).
25
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25
Demand–Control Model of Stress
26
HIGH
LOW
HIGH
Control
Demands
High Strain
High demand,
low control
Source: R. Karasek, Administrative Science Quarterly, 1979
Low Strain
LOW
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26
The “Long Arm of the Job”
Nature of work impacts satisfaction, alienation, stress, and work orientations
Job impacts life away from work
Martin Meissner’s “long arm”
Compensatory leisure hypothesis: people pursue activities away from work that compensate for what is absent in their jobs
Spillover hypothesis: work influences one’s choice of after-work activities
Kohn’s occupational self-direction: work affecting one’s personality and psychological functioning?
27
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27
Summary of Key Ideas & Concepts
Job satisfaction
Age, gender, education, and job satisfaction
Work rewards
Herzberg’s extrinsic vs. intrinsic rewards
Hygiene factors
Motivators
Kalleberg’s six dimensions of work
Social-psychological perspective on alienation
“Corrosion of character”
Work-related stress
Burnout
Karasek’s demand–control model
Active and passive jobs
Person–environment fit model
“Long arm of the job”
Compensatory and spillover hypotheses
Occupational self-direction
28
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28
Chapter 10 &
1
1
1
Copyright © 2021 Nelson Education Ltd
.
Prepared by
Karen D. Hughes,
Harvey J. Krahn,
and Harleen Padda,
University of Alberta
Outline
qTechnological, Economic, or Social Determinism?
qDownsizing
qChapter 11: Union and Industrial Relations
Technology
Pros and cons
• Create jobs
• Improve quality of
life
• Eliminated jobs
• Destroyed
environment
• Kill people
Technological, Economic, or
Social Determinism?
qTechnological determinism
qPattern and effects of technology are universal and
unalterable
q Ignores differences in how new technologies are taken up in
work settings and societies
qEconomic determinism
q“Market knows best” how to choose/implement new
technologies
qBUT people make decisions about implementing new
technologies.
qSocial determinism
qNeed “education, wide-ranging discussion, and open decision
making about how technologies will be used, by whom, and
for whose benefit”
4
Copyright © 2021 Nelson Education Ltd.
4. Downsizing
.
Downsizing
q“Typically driven by economic downturns in the private
sector and deficit-cutting agendas in the public sector” (p.
319 of text)
qImpact of “off-shoring,” mergers, restructuring
q Examples: Oshawa GM plant, Heinz, BlackBerry
q Heinz closure https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DpVJUPKklnE
qEffects for workers?
q Morale
q Financial
q Health
q Example: “survivor syndrome”
qReducing negative effects of downsizing by offering part-
time or seasonal work, covering costs of retraining laid-off
employees 6
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5. New Managerial Paradigms?
7
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New Managerial Paradigms?
q“Participative management” or “neo-Fordist”?
qSame production framework and power structure
qHyper-Taylorism/neo-Taylorism
q“Management by stress”
qExample: Air Canada’s flight attendants
qNew management paradigms as “social
technologies”
qProductivity and profit as main goals
qWorkers rarely involved in decisions about new
technologies 8
Copyright © 2021 Nelson Education Ltd.
Summary of Key Ideas &
Concepts
qMarx and employment
relationships
q Surplus value
q Exploitation
q Forms of alienation
qLabour process theory
qDeskilling/degradation
qEdwards and control
q Simple
q Technical
q Bureaucratic
q“Frontier of control”
qDeskilling vs. enskilling
qReskilling
qTechnological,
economic, social
determinism
qDownsizing
qNeo-Fordism
qHyper-Taylorism
qSocial technologies
9
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Chapter
11
Unions and
Industrial
Relations
10
Copyright © 2021 Nelson Education Ltd.
Prepared by
Karen D. Hughes,
Harvey J. Krahn,
and Harleen Padda,
University of Alberta
Outline
1. Theoretical Perspectives
2. History of Canadian Labour Movement
3. Union Membership Trends
4. Women and Unions
5. Management Opposition to Unions
6. Organized Labour and Collective Action
11
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1. Theoretical Perspectives
12
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Unions as Democratic Organizations
qConstitutions allow for elected union leaders.
qAssumed to be accountable and responsible
qMichels (1959) on union democracy and the iron
law of oligarchy
qLeaders develop expert knowledge, which gives them
power.
qMaintenance of power
qTrue of unions in Canada?
13
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Labour Negotiations
qOct 2011 United Steelworkers union
q July 2013 – Canadian Auto Workers union
q October 2013 United Food and Commercial
Workers
qNovember 2013 – Wal-Mart & United Food and
Commercial Workers union – Weyburn
Saskatchewan decertify
q Are most contracts between employers & unions
settled through work disruptions???
Canadian workers and unions
qMany workers are ambivalent regarding unions
q 40% “all in all, unions are a positive force in society”
q 61% Canadians feel unions do a good job protecting
member’s jobs
q 60% Canadians supported federal government when it
passed legislation to force striking Canada Post and Air
Canada employees back to work
qSo…how beneficial are unions???
qFocus of this chapter
qVideo – What have unions done for us ???
Theoretical Perspectives on
Organized Labour
q work is a power relationship where conflict is
always a possibility
qUnions are frequently involved
qmainstream industrial relations theory
qSystem of job regulation- core of worker-manager
relations tilts power towards workers
qBut…overplays importance of predictable and
harmonious industrial relations
Conflict and Cooperation
qCollective bargaining: union and employer reach
negotiated agreement (collective agreement/
contract)
qSpecific time period
qWages, benefits
qWork hours, schedules
qWorking conditions
qThreat of conflict
qNegotiations a “zero-sum game”?
17
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Unions as “Managers of Discontent”
qManagers of discontent
qWay of channeling worker complaints
qCarefully regulated dispute-resolution system
qArticulating problems/needs
qMaintenance of capitalism
qSeeking reductions in power imbalances
18
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“Business” versus “Social” Unionism
qBusiness unionism: emphasis on material gain
qIncreasing work/financial rewards
qDominates North American labour movement
qSocial unionism: broader agenda of societal reform
qEntering public debates about globalization, human rights,
health care reform
qSocial Movement Unionism
qActively collaborate with social justice organizations and
corporations to implement social reforms
19
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Economic Impact of Unions
qUnion wage premium
qDeclined, sometimes reversed in recent years
qMore likely to receive non-wage benefits
qReduction in overall wage inequality
qLarge workplaces in core sector
qFreeman and Medoff (1984)
q“Monopoly face”: “power to raise members’ wages at
the expense of employers and of nonunionized workers”
q“Collective voice face”: role in democratizing
authoritarian workplaces; speaking as one
20
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2. History of Canadian Labour
Movement
21
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History of Canadian Labour
Movement
qThree waves of unionization
qFirst wave: craft unionism
qSecond wave: industrial unionism
qThird wave: public-sector unions
22
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First Wave: Craft Unions (Pre-
1930s)
qSkilled crafts (e.g., printers,
carpenters, bricklayers,
shoemakers, tailors)
q1872 Trade Unions Act
q“Benevolent” societies,
controlled access to craft
q “Aristocrats” of labour—
excluded unskilled
q1883—Trades and Labour
Congress (TLC)
23
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Industrial Unionism
qKnights of Labour
qOne Big Union
qWorkers of the
World (“Wobblies”)
q1919—Winnipeg
General Strike (1 of
400 strikes that
year).
Winnipeg
General
Strike 1919
https://www.youtube.com/w
atch?v=pVKo6xEgjaI&t=196s
Video: On Strike: The Winnipeg General
Strike (1919)
q Six-week strike, May–July 1919
q 24,000 workers strike; later, 6,000 more join
q Banks, streetcars, mail, telegrams, telephones, food
delivery, water, power supply, police, fire services
q Strike demands include
q right to collective bargaining
q living wage
q eight-hour day
26
Copyright © 2021 Nelson Education Ltd.
Conclusion
Chapter 10
Conflict and
Control in the
Workplace
1
Copyright © 2021 Nelson Education Ltd.
Prepared by
Karen D. Hughes,
Harvey J. Krahn,
and Harleen Padda,
University of Alberta
Outline
1. Marx and Employment Relationships
2.
Labour Process Theory
3. Technology and the Labour Process
4. Downsizing
5. New Managerial Paradigms?
2
Copyright © 2021 Nelson Education Ltd.
1. Marx and Employment
Relationships
3
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Marx & Employment Relationships
qCapitalism inherently conflictual?
qCapitalist labour market
qWage labour, exploitation, and surplus value
qControl of labour
qWorkers experience alienation from
qproducts
qlabour process
qother workers
qthemselves
qClass conflict and revolution?
4
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2. Labour Process Theory
5
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Labour Process Theory
qHarry Braverman’s (1974) Labour and Monopoly
Capital
qDivision of labour and deskilling
qDegradation and future class conflict
qBUT
qDeskilling a universal pattern?
qGendered nature of workplace skills?
q “Male” and “female” jobs
qWorker resistance?
6
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Models of Managerial Control
qRichard Edwards (1979)
q“Contested terrain”
qManagement and control systems vary historically by
sector and skill
q Simple control
q Technical control
q Bureaucratic control
7
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Modes of Managerial Control
qAndrew Friedman (1977)
qShifting “frontier of control”
qManagement and control systems determined by conflict
and accommodation
qRange from
q direct control to
q responsible autonomy
8
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Electronic Control
qHighly active or relatively passive
qExample: security cameras vs. tracking performance
qTypically intrusive
qExample: tracking with GPS, reading emails
qGrowth of call centres
q“Electronic sweatshops”?
qRoom for resistance?
9
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The Deskilling Debate
qDeskilling or enskilling?
qKnowledge and multi-skilled workers
qHow to define skill?
qSubstantive complexity
qDecision-making autonomy
qIkeler (2015) compared skill requirements of sales
workers in different stores and found that..
qdepartment stores had “semi-skilled selling”
qdiscount stores had “deskilled selling”
qMulti-skilling and multitasking
10
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3. Technology and the Labour
Process
11
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Technology & the Labour Process
qNew technologies and reduction of physical labour
qICT innovations increased productivity and created
new types of skilled work.
qExample: robots eliminating dangerous jobs
qICT and job quality? Electronic control of workers?
qAI putting jobs at risk of automation
qTruck drivers, retail sales clerks, administrative assistants,
paralegals
qFrey and Osborne (2017) conclude that 47% of
occupations in the U.S. are at high risk of
computerization. 12
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Technological, Economic, or
Social Determinism?
qTechnological determinism
qPattern and effects of technology are universal and
unalterable
qIgnores differences in how new technologies are taken up in
work settings and societies
qEconomic determinism
q“Market knows best” how to choose/implement new
technologies
qBUT people make decisions about implementing new
technologies.
qSocial determinism
qNeed “education, wide-ranging discussion, and open decision
making about how technologies will be used, by whom, and
for whose benefit” (p. 319 of text)
13
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4. Downsizing
14
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Downsizing
q“Typically driven by economic downturns in the private
sector and deficit-cutting agendas in the public sector”
(p. 319 of text)
qImpact of “off-shoring,” mergers, restructuring
qExamples: Oshawa GM plant, Heinz, BlackBerry
qEffects for workers?
qMorale
qFinancial
qHealth
q Example: “survivor syndrome”
qReducing negative effects of downsizing by offering
part-time or seasonal work, covering costs of retraining
laid-off employees 15
Copyright © 2021 Nelson Education Ltd.
Downsizing
qVideo clip: Up in the Air (2009)
16
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5. New Managerial Paradigms?
17
Copyright © 2021 Nelson Education Ltd.
New Managerial Paradigms?
q“Participative management” or “neo-Fordist”?
qSame production framework and power structure
qHyper-Taylorism/neo-Taylorism
q“Management by stress”
qExample: Air Canada’s flight attendants
qNew management paradigms as “social
technologies”
qProductivity and profit as main goals
qWorkers rarely involved in decisions about new
technologies 18
Copyright © 2021 Nelson Education Ltd.
Summary of Key Ideas &
Concepts
qMarx and employment
relationships
q Surplus value
q Exploitation
q Forms of alienation
qLabour process theory
qDeskilling/degradation
qEdwards and control
q Simple
q Technical
q Bureaucratic
q“Frontier of control”
qDeskilling vs. enskilling
qReskilling
qTechnological,
economic, social
determinism
qDownsizing
qNeo-Fordism
qHyper-Taylorism
qSocial technologies
19
Copyright © 2021 Nelson Education Ltd.
“He is 26 and worked at U.S. Steel for just over five months before getting locked out. He
sits with his friends-five others, also junior employees at U.S. Steel-allleery of the media
and reluctant to give their names. They range in age from 26 to 45. They have gathered
around on camp chairs and an old wooden box that they use as a bench. On a grassy lot to
the right of the main gates of U.S. Steel at Burlington and Wilcox streets, their conversation
quickly turns to their frustration, anger and rage about being locked out. Talking over each
other, one of them says that picket duty is ‘boring as hell.”‘
“It’s hard to avoid politics. Stan, 54, who has worked at the plant for 33 years, says the
workers have been ‘good soldiers’ while U.S. Steel has ‘reneged on everything’ and ‘raised
unemployment levels.’ They are angry with people, allegedly scabs from other unions,
crossing their picket line. They criticize politicians for showing up for ‘photo-ops’ during the
federal election campaign and they are angry that they haven’t heard from them since …. ”
“They are worried about their employment insurance running out at the end of August.
Currently, they receive $400 a week in El, plus $200 a week in strike pay for picketing eight
hours a week…. One of the younger workers who chose to remain anonymous said that
above all else: ‘I don’t want pity. I just want my job back. ‘”
[Interview with some of the more than 600 Hamilton workers locked out by their employer
in July 2011]
Source: Vidya Kauri. “Life on the picket line.” The Spectator, July 7, 2011. http://www.thespec.com/
news-story/2213930-life-on-the-picket-line/. Reprinted with permission of The Hamilton Spectator.
INTRODUCTION
The members of the United Steelworkers union were locked out, or not
allowed to work, by their Hamilton employer, who thus hoped to force their
union to accept the company’s wage and benefits offer. Eventually, in mid-
October 2011, members voted to accept essentially the same offer they had
NEL
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
received before the lockout began. They did not get the salary increase they
had hoped for, and they had to accept the fact that new employees would not
get the kind of pension plan that older workers already had. 1
In contrast, in July 2013, after a three-week strike against Coca-Cola,
700 members of the Canadian Auto Workers union voted to accept an
offer their union leaders had negotiated with the company. Union leaders
announced that their concerns about pensions and about the outsourcing of
jobs had been resolved through collective bargaining, while company officials
stated they felt the deal was fair for everyone.2
Three months later, in early October 2013, more than 80 percent of
8,500 members of the United Food and Commercial Workers voted to accept
the new offer their company had made. They had been on strike against Real
Canadian Superstores in Alberta for only three days. While there was one
key worker demand that the company did not meet guaranteed minimum
weekly hours for part-time workers it did agree to higher hourly wages and
improved benefits, including health care coverage.3
Meanwhile, in mid-2013, young baristas in a Halifax coffee shop voted to
join the Service Employees International Union, while their counterparts in
two other local coffee shops were organizing to do the same. 4 Labour analysts
were somewhat surprised by this development, assuming that because many
workers in this industry are employed part time while attending school, they
would not be so interested in joining a union.
A month later, in Weyburn, Saskatchewan, the results of a vote by
Wal-Mart employees to decertify a union were released 51 of 56 employees
voted to get rid of the union already in their workplace. This left Wal-Mart
union-free at all its locations across Canada, and the United Food and
Commercial Workers (UFCW) vowing to renew its efforts to unionize
Wal-Mart’s Canadian outlets, something it has been trying to do since 1977.5
These brief accounts highlight a number of points we will make in this
chapter. The ongoing battle between Wal-Mart and UFCW Canada highlights
the rights of workers to join a union, widely considered a basic human right.
As we will see, a large minority of Canadian workers are already union mem-
bers, but the majority are not, some because they do not have the opportunity
and others because they are unaware of or ambivalent about unions’ goals and
methods. We will also learn that the union movement is not limited to blue-
collar manufacturing and resource-extraction industries. Unions have become
328 NEL
Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
very active in the upper-tier services (particularly in the public sector) and are
also trying to organize lower-tier service workers in the retail and food and
accommodation sectors.
These examples remind us that when labour negotiations reach an impasse
and a strike or lockout occurs, we are not simply looking at a “union problem.”
There are two parties involved. Both employers and workers (through their
unions) are trying to get a better deal for themselves, and both typically think
that their own position is fair. Furthermore, when unions resort to strike
action, the outcome is not always beneficial to workers. What is not evident
from these examples, though, nor from media accounts of strikes and lock-
outs, is that the vast majority of contracts between Canadian employers and
unions are settled without any work disruptions. The data we will examine
clearly demonstrate this.
We have already noted the ambivalence of many Canadian workers
regarding unions. The Canadian public, as a whole, is similarly uncertain
about its response to organized labour. For example, a 2012 EKOS Research
national public opinion survey found that only 40 percent of Canadian adults
agreed that “all in all, unions are a positive force in society.”6 Another survey,
conducted by the Public Response Group in 2012, revealed that 61 percent of
Canadians felt that unions “do a good job of protecting their members’ jobs,”
but only 46 percent agreed that “gains made by unions for their members also
improve the lives of other Canadians.”7 And, in 2011, a poll conducted by
Abacus Research showed that 60 percent of Canadians supported the federal
government when it passed legislation to force striking unionized Canada Post
and Air Canada employees back to work. 8
These polling results frame several other questions asked in this chapter.
Just how beneficial are unions for their members but also for society as a
whole? Should unions be rethinking their goals and strategies? What is the
role of government in regulating industrial relations? As we will see, public-
sector unions are now the largest and fastest-growing unions in Canada. This
development raises a unique and difficult dilemma since, for these unions, the
government is both the employer and the institution that makes and enforces
the rules governing what unions can do. When is it justifiable for “the public
good” to take precedence over the rights and interests of employees? But before
tackling these contentious subjects, we will review some relevant theoretical
perspectives and provide a brief history of organized labour in Canada.
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THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES ON
ORGANIZED LABOUR
Mainstream industrial relations theory views the system ofjob regulation as the
core of worker-management relations (Bain and Clegg 1974).9 The rules and
regulations that form the basis of collective agreements are assumed to inject
stability into employment relations by tilting the balance of power slightly
away from management and toward workers. However, this perspective over-
plays the importance of predictable and harmonious industrial relations. By
focusing on the formal system of rules and institutions governing industrial
relations, the mainstream perspective does not question the existing distribu-
tion of power between workers and management. It also overlooks much of
the daily informal interaction between workers and employers, as “the rules
of the game” are constantly being negotiated. It is important to recognize
that work is a power relationship in which conflict is always a possibility
(Chapter 10) and in which unions are frequently involved.
Conflict and Cooperation in Union-Management Relations
Collective bargaining is the process by which a union, on behalf of its mem-
bers, and an employer reach a negotiated agreement (called a collective agree-
ment or a contract), which defines for a specific time period wages, work hours
and schedules, benefits, and other working conditions, and procedures for
resolving grievances. Collective agreements are negotiated and administered
under provincial and federal labour laws and are designed to reduce conflict.
Indeed, the main thrust of modern industrial relations practice is the avoid-
ance of conflict. Thus, for the system to operate with some degree of fairness
and equity for workers, who, on the whole, are in the weaker bargaining posi-
tion, there must be the threat of conflict that could disrupt the employer’s
business. While critics often insist that the Canadian industrial relations
scene is too adversarial, a federal government task force on labour relations
responded to these concerns decades ago, explaining that
330
[p] aradoxical as it may appear, collective bargaining is designed to resolve
conflict through conflict, or at least through the threat of conflict. It is an
adversary system in which two basic issues must be resolved: how avail-
able revenue is to be divided, and how the clash between management’s
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
drive for productive efficiency and the workers’ quest for job, income
and psychic security are to be reconciled. 10
As noted frequently in Chapters 8 through 10, managers of work organizations
must balance the profit-seeking goals of owners (and shareholders) and the
resulting need to control employees with the necessity of achieving a work-
able level of cooperation and commitment from them. Workers aim for higher
wages, better working conditions, and more autonomy in their jobs. Employers
pursue higher profits, lower costs, and increased productivity. The chronic ten-
sion between these opposing interests forces tradeoffs on both sides, and may
also generate open conflict. However, not all union-management negotiations
are a zero-sum game, or a situation in which one side can gain something only if
the other gives up something. Indeed, on some issues, such as improved health
and safety conditions (see Chapter 12), negotiations can produce a win-win
situation in which both workers and management benefit. This approach to
negotiations is called “mutual gains bargaining” (Weiss 2003).
Unions as “Managers of Discontent”
Having observed the oppressive conditions experienced by mid-19th-century
factory workers, Marx concluded that eventually their misery and poverty
would ignite a revolution (Chapter 1). But, as Stephen Hill (1981: Chapter 7)
pointed out, even Marxists, committed to the belief that capitalism pits
workers and bosses against each other in constant struggle, acknowledge that
collective bargaining integrates workers into the existing capitalist system.
In fact, Vladimir Lenin, leader of the Russian Revolution, dismissed trade
unions as capable only of reform, not revolution.
In some respects, contemporary unions function as managers of discontent
(Mills 1948). They channel the frustrations and complaints of workers into
a carefully regulated dispute-resolution system. Unions help their members
to articulate specific work problems or needs, and solutions are then sought
through collective bargaining, or through grievance procedures. For example,
labour legislation prohibiting strikes during the term of a collective agreement
puts pressure on union leaders to contain any actions by their members that
could disrupt the truce with management. Thus, most unions today operate
in ways that contribute to the maintenance of capitalism, seeking reforms that
reduce power imbalances favouring owners and managers.
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
Generally speaking, unions are democratic organizations whose con-
stitutions allow members to elect their leaders. Theoretically, then, union
leaders are responsive and accountable to the union members who elected
them, translating their wishes into tangible collective bargaining goals. But
this has not always been the case. Robert Michels (1959) was the first to
investigate the issue of union democracy. His study of German trade unions
prior to World War I concluded that leaders in working-class organizations
always dominate members. Michels’s famous iron law of oligarchy draws on
technical, organizational, and psychological explanations. According to this
theory, leaders develop expert knowledge, which gives them power. Once in
office, leaders can control the organization to maintain their power. Finally,
the masses tend to identify with leaders and expect them to exercise power on
their behal£
But in Canada and elsewhere, over a number of decades, we have wit-
nessed the emergence of strong grassroots movements challenging entrenched
union leadership cliques and, in effect, opposing oligarchic rule. Most unions
today espouse democratic principles, but some have been more successful in
putting these into practice than others. In fact, union officials seem to be
constantly trying to increase the participation of members in union activities
(Freeman 1982). Images of corrupt and autocratic leaders, while headlined by
the media and reinforced by the history of a few unions, are far from typical.
Thus, what Michels (1959) discovered was not a universal trait of unions, but
a potential problem faced by all large bureaucratic organizations.
Business versus Social Unionism
Typically, the daily activities of unions focus on two types of goals: gaining
more control over the labour process (Chapter 10) and increasing work
rewards for members. There are frequently compromises between these two
goals. Because of their immediate economic needs or because they are not all
that involved in their work (Marx would have called this “alienation”), workers
may want their unions to focus primarily on economic rewards. In addition,
employers are sometimes willing to give up more of their profits rather than
concede to workers’ greater decision-making authority. This emphasis by
unions on material gain rather than job control, known as business unionism,
has become a hallmark of the North American labour movement.
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
In the last few decades, however, we have also seen the emergence in some
unions of social unionism. While still engaging in collective bargaining with
employers over wages, benefits, and other work rewards, some public-sector
unions, such as the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), along
with some large private-sector unions, such as the Canadian Auto Workers
(CAW; now renamed Unifor), have taken on a much broader agenda of soci-
etal reform, entering public debates about issues such as globalization, inter-
national human rights, and health care reform (Gindin 1995). And, in a few
cases, some union locals (rather than the complete union) have actively col-
laborated with social justice organizations to implement social reforms in their
communities, across the country, or even globally. David Camfield (2011)
describes such involvement by unions in networks of organizations that are
trying to benefit others, not just union members, as social movement unionism.
In a similar manner, some U.S. and Mexican unions have collaborated to resist
the negative effects of globalization on workers in both countries (Kay 2011).
The Economic Impact of Unions
Unions benefit their members financially. On average, Canadian unionized
workers earn about 10 percent more than nonunion workers do, with the
impact being greater for women than for men. However, in recent years, this
union wage premium has declined, or even reversed in firms with 500 or more
employees (Statistics Canada 2008i: 41). Union members also are more likely
than comparable nonunion workers to receive additional non-wage benefits.
For example, a study of Canadian child-care workers found that unions raised
wages by 15 percent, had a positive impact on benefits, and provided financial
incentives for workers to improve their qualifications and skills (Cleveland,
Gunderson, and Hyatt 2003). Unions also contribute to reducing overall wage
inequality in a nation’s labour market, although less so than in the past. The
union impact on wages is greatest for workers in the lower and middle ranges
of the income, education, and skill distributions. In other words, without
unions, income inequality in Canada would likely be even higher (Chapter 5).
Indeed, in Canada, the United States, and the United Kingdom, growing
income inequality has been linked, in part, to declining union membership.11
Access to these economic advantages of union membership obviously
depends on where one works. Unionization is significantly higher in large
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
workplaces in the core sector of the economy (Chapter 5), where employers
are in a better competitive position to provide decent wages and working
conditions. In turn, nonstandard jobs, with their lower wages, fewer non-
wage benefits, and less job security (Chapter 4), are typically nonunionized
(Kalleberg, Reskin, and Hudson 2000). Barriers to unionization of part-time
and temporary workers include restrictive legislation and, until recently, lack
of interest among unions. However, some unions have begun to recognize
the need for and importance of organizing workers in nonstandard jobs
(Vasko 2000).
The most thorough analysis of what trade unions do continues to
be a study by two Harvard economists, Richard Freeman and James
Medoff (1984: 5-19), who make a useful distinction between the two
“faces” of unionism. The monopoly face represents unions’ power to raise
members’ wages at the expense of employers and of nonunionized workers.
The collective voice face shifts attention to how unions democratize
authoritarian workplaces, giving workers a collective voice in dealing with
management. Freeman and Medoff admit that unions do impose some
social and economic costs, but think that these are far outweighed by their
positive contributions. Unions significantly advance workers’ economic
and political rights and freedoms. And, to the chagrin of their opponents,
unions also typically boost productivity through lower employee turnover,
better management performance, reduced hiring and training costs, and
greater labour-management communication and cooperation (Lee 2007;
Gunderson and Hyatt 2009). But because of higher wage costs, productivity
gains do not necessarily make unionized firms more profitable. On balance,
unionization appears to improve rather than to harm the social and
economic systems (Walsworth and Long 2012).
HISTORY OF THE CANADIAN LABOUR
MOVEMENT
Craft Unionism
Skilled craftworkers carpenters, bricklayers, masons, cabinetmakers,
blacksmiths, shoemakers, and tailors were the first to unionize in
Canada. A strike by Toronto printers in 1872 resulted in the Trade
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
Unions Act, which, for the first time, legalized union activity. Prior to
that, unions had been considered a conspiracy against the normal opera-
tions of business. Other significant events that laid the foundations for
trade unionism in Canada were the Nine-Hour Movement in the 1870s,
involving working-class agitation for shorter working hours; and the crea-
tion of the Trades and Labour Congress (TLC) in 1883 as the first central
labour body.12
Craft pride based on the special skills acquired through a long appren-
ticeship, solidarity with fellow artisans, and a close integration of work and
communities were the hallmarks of these early craft unions. Craftsmen (there
were no women among them) were the aristocrats of the working class.
Printers, for example, reinforced their status by referring to their work as a
“profession.” As other craftsmen have done, shoemakers bolstered craft pride
by going back into history to identify St. Crispin as their patron saint (Kealey
1980: 292).
Craft unions served as benevolent societies, providing members with a
form of social insurance years before the rise of the welfare state. They also
protected their members’ position in the labour market by regulating access
to the craft, thus monopolizing its unique skills. Today, this practice would
be referred to as a labour market shelter (see Chapter 5). And as small local
enterprises of the 19th century gave way to the factories and large corporations
of the 20th, unions provided craftsmen with a defence against the erosion of
their way of life. Through their unions, artisans vigorously opposed scientific
management and the mechanization and reorganization of craft production
in factories.
Craft unions dominated the young Canadian labour movement well
into the 20th century, a time when the labour market for many skilled
trades spanned both sides of the Canada-U.S. border. Hence, these inter-
national unions were American based and affiliated with the conservative
American Federation of Labor (AFL). The internationals quickly came to
control the Canadian labour scene. At the 1902 convention of the Trades
and Labour Congress, the AFL unions purged their Canadian-based rivals
by successfully moving that no organization duplicating one already in
the American federation could be a member of the Trades and Labour
Congress. They thus stole power from more radical Canadian labour leaders
(Babcock 1974).
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
Industrial Unionism
The craft principle underlying the early AFL unions contrasts with industrial
unionism, where all workers in an industry are represented by the same union,
regardless of their occupation. The Knights of Labour, the earliest industrial
union in Canada, organized their first local assembly in Hamilton, Ontario,
in 1875. For a brief period in the 1880s, they challenged the dominance
of the AFL craft unions. Driven by an idealistic radicalism, the Knights’
immediate goal was to organize all workers into a single union, regardless of
sex, skill level, craft, or industry, in order to eventually abolish the capitalist
wage system and create a new society. Their membership peaked in 1887,
with more than 200 local assemblies representing workers in 75 occupations.
But rapid membership growth made it difficult to maintain an idealistic
philosophy, and political rivalries both internal and external (with the AFL
craft unions) led to the demise of the Knights. By the early years of the
20th century, they had all but disappeared in Canada (Kealey 1981) and the
United States (Voss 1994).
Only a handful of industrial unions emerged in the early 20th century.
Several were part of the rising tide of labour radicalism that reached a crest
with the 1919 Winnipeg General Strike. There was a distinctive regional fla-
vour to these working-class protests, as most were rooted in western Canada
(McCormack 1978). For example, the radical ideology of the Chicago-based
Industrial Workers of the World (the “Wobblies”) attracted unskilled immi-
grants employed in lumbering, mining, agriculture, and railways in the West
prior to World War I. One Big Union (OBU), a revolutionary industrial
union, received widespread support in the western provinces, particularly
among miners, loggers, and transportation workers. One Big Union called for
secession from the conservative AFL and its Canadian arm, the Trades and
Labour Congress. Its support for the Russian Revolution brought vigorous
counterattacks from employers, governments, and craft unions, and caused the
union’s eventual defeat in the 1920s.
Not until the 1940s did industrial unionism become firmly established in
Canada. The breakthrough was the UAW’s milestone victory in 1937 against
General Motors in Oshawa, Ontario. The United Auto Workers sprang up
under the banner of the left-leaning Congress of Industrial Organizations
(CIO) in the 1930s to organize unskilled and semiskilled workers in
336 NEL
Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
mass-production industries. Many of the initial forays into the auto, electrical,
rubber, and chemical factories of corporate North America were led by com-
munist organizers. Craft union leaders opposed the CIO largely on political
grounds, despite the fact that Canadian workers embraced the CIO form of
industrial unionism (Abella 197 4).
In 1956, Canadian craft and industrial unions buried their differences,
uniting skilled and unskilled workers within a single central labour organiza-
tion: the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC). A similar merger of the AFL and
the CIO had occurred one year earlier in the United States. The CLC remains
Canada’s “house of labour.” Its affiliated unions represented 3.2 million
workers in 2013, almost 70 percent of all Canadian union members. 13 The
CLC promotes the economic, political, and organizational interests of affili-
ated unions by providing research, education, and organizational and collec-
tive bargaining services, as well as by eliminating jurisdictional conflicts. It
sometimes becomes embroiled in inter-union disputes over jurisdictions and
complaints about unions raiding other unions for members. One prominent
example was the Canadian Auto Workers’ (CAW) recruitment in 1987 of
Newfoundland fishery workers who were at that time represented by the
United Food and Commercial Workers International Union. At times, the
CLC has become active on the national political stage, for example, by
forming coalitions with other community-based groups to oppose free trade
in the 1980s. The CLC also has had strong ties to the New Democratic Party
(NDP), taking a leading role in founding the party in 1961. In the last several
elections, though, CLC leaders have been slower to encourage CLC members
to vote NDP, although they have almost always opposed the Conservative
government in Ottawa.
Quebec Labour
The history and present character of the labour movement in Quebec con-
tribute to the distinctiveness of social and economic life in that province
(Deom, Grenier, and Beaumont 2009). Quebec labour’s history is a fascinating
topic in its own right and deserves more than the brief treatment we can afford
to give it here. Many of the issues central to Canada’s ongoing constitutional
debates are amplified in the arena of labour relations. For example, industrial
relations have been shaped by a different legal framework in Quebec (its laws
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
are derived from the Civil Code of France, rather than British-based common
law). A more interventionist state role has created a higher degree of central-
ized bargaining than in other provinces, as well as resulting in some innovative
legislation, such as the 1977 anti-strikebreaking law. Nationalist politics have
left an indelible mark on union policies and priorities, too. Indeed, the ques-
tion of special representation for Quebec on the executive of the Canadian
Labour Congress at the congress’s 1992 convention raised the spectre of a split
between the national umbrella group and the Quebec Federation of Labour,
which represents CLC affiliates in that province.
The development of unions in Quebec followed a different path from
that of the rest of Canada. For example, in the early 20th century, the Roman
Catholic Church organized conservative unions that, unlike their counterparts
elsewhere, emphasized the common interests of employers and employees.
During the years that Premier Maurice Duplessis and the ultraconservative
Union Nationale held power (from 1936 to 1960), the state took repressive
actions to stifle more independent union development. Worker militancy
flared up in response, the most violent manifestations being the 1949 miners’
strike at Asbestos and the 1957 Murdochville copper miners’ strike. Some ana-
lysts view these strikes as major catalysts in Quebec’s Quiet Revolution, which
ushered in sweeping social, economic, and political reforms in the 1960s.
During this period, the old Roman Catholic unions cut their ties with the
church, becoming one of the main central labour organizations in the province
(the CNTU, or Confederation of National Trade Unions) and adopting an
increasingly radical stance. Hence, the Quebec Federation of Labour, made up
of CLC-affiliated unions, differs from its counterparts in other provinces; it
represents a minority of union members in the province and operates in a more
independent manner. Another influential union organization is the Federation
des syndicats de 1′ enseignement, the organization representing about 60,000
teachers in French school boards across the province. Thus, there is no unified
Quebec labour movement, although these central organizations have banded
together on occasion, the most notable example being the 1972 Common Front
strike by some 200,000 public-sector workers against government policies.
The Role of the Canadian State in Industrial Relations
In Canada, there has developed a legislative and administrative framework
that casts the state as impartial umpire, mediating between labour and capital
338 NEL
Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
in an effort to establish and maintain industrial peace. The architect of this
system was William Lyon Mackenzie King, the first federal minister of
labour and later a Liberal prime minister. King’s 1907 Industrial Disputes
Investigation Act (IDIA) became the cornerstone of Canada’s modern indus-
trial relations policy that strives to institutionalize conflict through the control
of law. The Act provided for compulsory conciliation (fact finding) in disputes
during a “cooling off” period, a tripartite board of arbitration, and special
treatment of public interest disputes involving public services. It also banned
strikes or lockouts during the term of a collective agreement. At first, the Act
was applied to disputes in coal mines and railways. Its scope was extended
during World War I, and in the 1950s, its principles were incorporated into
provincial legislation. In some instances, the state used the powers of the Act
to legislate an end to strikes. This type of state intervention has shaped the
pattern of industrial conflict in Canada some would argue, in the interests
of employers (Craven 1980; Huxley 1979).
In 1944, the National War Labour Order, regulation P.C. 1003, brought
Canadian industrial relations into its modern phase. Modelled on the 1935
U.S. National Labor Relations Act (Wagner Act), P.C. 1003 granted employees
in the private sector collective bargaining rights, set down union certification
procedures, spelled out a code of unfair labour practices, and established a
labour relations board to administer the law. These measures paved the way
for a postwar labour-management pact designed to maintain industrial peace.
This truce was enshrined in federal legislation in 1948 and in subsequent
provincial legislation.
Another milestone in the legal entrenchment of collective bargaining rights
came out of a 1945 strike by the United Auto Workers at the Ford Motor
Company in Windsor, Ontario. The Rand Formula, named after Justice
Ivan Rand of the Supreme Court, whose ruling was instrumental in settling
the strike, provided for union security through a union shop and union dues
checkoff According to the Rand Formula, even though no one should be
required to join a union, it is justifiable to automatically deduct union dues
from the paycheques of all employees in a workplace because a union must
act for the benefit of all employees. It does not matter whether or not the
employees belong to the union.
The emergence of public-sector unions in the second half of the
20th century changed the industrial relations scene yet again. The movement
toward full-fledged public-sector unionism began in Saskatchewan in 1944.
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
The real push, however, started when Quebec public employees were granted
collective bargaining rights in 1964. Another major breakthrough was the
1967 Public Service Staff Relations Act, which opened the door to unions in
the federal civil service.
Some analysts argue that industrial relations entered a coercive phase
during the 1980s. Leo Panitch and Donald Swartz (1993) view government
imposition of wage controls, more restrictive trade union legislation, and the
use of courts to end strikes as signals of the end of “free collective bargaining,”
as established by the industrial relations system set out in earlier federal legisla-
tion. Panitch and Swartz characterize this new era as permanent exceptionalism,
reflecting how the suspension of labour’s rights and more heavy-handed state
intervention became the rule rather than the exception. 14 As we shall see later,
there is now considerable debate over whether Canadian industrial relations
are being destabilized.
“Canadianizing” Unions
The rise of public-sector unions has also helped to Canadianize the labour
movement. At the beginning of the 20th century, U.S.-based international
unions represented about 95 percent of all unionized workers in Canada.
By 1969, this proportion had dropped to 65 percent, and it has continued
to decline rapidly since then.15 The vulnerability of Canada’s branch-plant
economy, particularly during the 1980s, taught growing numbers of workers
the need for greater local control of union activities. Different bargaining
agendas also tended to arise in the two countries, reflecting their distinc-
tive industrial relations environments. Canadian autoworkers, for instance,
roundly rejected the concessions made to employers by the U.S. wing of
their union. The issue of national autonomy came to a head in the 1984
strike against General Motors by the Canadian division of the United Auto
Workers. These Canadian autoworkers found themselves pitted against not
only General Motors, but also the UA W leadership in Detroit, which wanted
Canadian workers to accept the concessions agreed to by their American
counterparts. While autonomy was not the goal of the Canadian workers
going into the strike, it became an inevitable result.16
Beyond having different bargaining priorities and strategies, some
Canadian branches of international unions felt that their dues were flowing
340 NEL
Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
into the U.S. headquarters with few services flowing back. These and other fac-
tors prompted a growing number of separations. In addition to the Canadian
Auto Workers, the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union grew
out of a Canada-U.S. split in an international union. 17 However, even after
they split, good working relations were maintained between Canadianized
unions and their former U.S. parents. What will be interesting to watch in the
future is how unions create new forms of international cooperation beyond
Canada and the United States to address the impact of economic globaliza-
tion on workers. For example, the United Steelworkers recently joined with
Unite, the biggest union in the United Kingdom, to create the first global
union: Workers Uniting (Workers Uniting 2010).
A strong argument in support of international unions has been that they
are organized labour’s best defence against the global strategies of multina-
tional corporations (Garver et al. 2007). Yet the international unions have
not always been effective in dealing with the sorts of problems multinational
corporations created for Canadian employees. For example, in response to
the global recession in 2008, U.S.-based unions supported protectionist trade
policies in an effort to preserve members’ jobs within the United States, thus
putting Canadian workers’ jobs at risk.
UNION MEMBERSHIP TRENDS
Figure 11.1 traces union membership growth in Canada since 1911, when
there were only 133,000 union members in the country (So/o of all non-
agricultural paid workers). In 2012, there were approximately 4.66 million
union members in the Canadian workforce (30o/o of non-agricultural paid
workers). These percentages measure the unionization rate or union
density and reflect the proportion of actual union members to potential
members. The exclusion of agriculture, where most workers are self-employed
and are, therefore, ineligible for union membership, allows for more accurate
comparisons with earlier periods when agriculture was a much larger sector,
and with other countries at different levels of industrialization.
It is important to note that collective bargaining coverage is typically about
two percentage points higher than the unionization rate (Statistics Canada
2008i: 73). This difference is a result of some non-members in unionized
workplaces being entitled to the wages and benefits negotiated by the union
NEL 341
Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
FIGURE 11.1 Union Membership in Canada, 1911-2012
Number …… Percent
5,000 40.0% …..
l! 4,500 ‘rir 35.0% :e 8
4,000
::a
c:::) .~
.s 30.0% ~ ….,;;;.
3,500 cp
~ ~ ~ 25.0% 3,000 c:::
~ “”‘- ~ a Q) e 2,500 20.0% ~~
~ = ~ 2,000 ….. § 15.0% ~
“”‘- 1,500 ~ a …. 10.0% Q) Q)
~ 1,000 e
5.0% ~ ~ 500 ….. §
0 0.0%
.,…._ .,…._ .,…._ .,…._ .,…._ .,…._ .,…._ .,…._ .,…._
~ 8 ;g gg C\J .,…._ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ !’…, ~ ~
.,…._
0) 0) 0) <:;:::)
~ ~ ~ .,…._ .,…._ .,…._ .,…._ .,…._ .,…._ .,…._ .,…._ .,…._ .,…._ C\J
Source: Source: 1 911-1 975, Statistics Canada. Historical Statistics of Canada. Table E175-177 – Union membership in Canada,
in total and as a percentage of non-agricultural paid workers and union members with international affiliation, 1911 to 1 975.
279-0025- Number of unionized workers, employees and union density, by sex and province, annual (persons unless otherwise
noted).
estimates (LFS), employees by union coverage, North American Industry Classification System (NAICS), sex and age group, annual
(persons).
in a collective agreement. Among them are supervisory employees who are
excluded because of their management role, new hires on probation, and indi-
viduals who, perhaps because of their religious or other personal beliefs, opt
not to join. In 2011, there were 295,000 nonunion members in this category
(Uppal2011). Furthermore, Canadian labour law permits nonunion forms of
collective representation, such as staff associations, which represent 5 percent
of all employees. Another 9 percent of employees belong to professional asso-
ciations, and some of these set wages and working conditions for members. 18
Three major surges in Canadian union membership growth can be seen
in Figure 11.1. The first two coincided with the two world wars (1914-18
and 1939-45). This pattern is not surprising because national mobilization
for these wars resulted in economic growth, labour shortages, and the need
for a high level of cooperation between employers and employees, all of which
are key ingredients for successful union recruitment. As already noted, in the
years during and immediately following World War II, Canada’s contemporary
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
industrial relations system took shape. The third growth surge, largely
facilitated by supportive legislation, took place in the 1970s. The rise of public-
sector unions in that decade brought many civil servants, teachers, nurses, and
other public employees into the organized labour movement.
Canadian union density peaked at 37 percent in 1984. The decline over
the next three decades can be traced to a number of recessions and to industrial
restructuring, which both cut deeply into the traditional membership strength
of unions in manufacturing and other blue-collar occupations. Similarly, peri-
odic budget cuts and downsizing in the public sector, beginning in the 1990s,
have led to lower union density. Employer pressures for concessions and the
whittling away of collective bargaining rights by governments and the courts
have contributed to a more hostile climate for labour relations, a topic to
which we return below.
The labour movement has also undergone organizational changes. A
notable trend is consolidation, resulting from mergers and membership growth
since the 1960s (Chaison 2004). In 1968, there were 14 large unions (30,000
or more members), accounting for just under half of total union membership.
By 2012, 42 unions had memberships of 30,000 or more, comprising over
75 percent of total union membership in the country. 19 Nevertheless, a defining
feature of the Canadian labour movement is the large number of locals. In
2008, the 213 national and international unions contained 14,691 locals, the
basic self-governing unit of the labour movement and the legal entity for collec-
tive bargaining. Membership in locals ranged from just a few members to more
than 45,000. In short, despite consolidations, Canadian labour remains frag-
mented and, consequently, collective bargaining is decentralized. Unlike the
situation in some European nations, where industry-wide national bargaining
is the norm, the Canadian pattern of single-establishment, single-union bar-
gaining results in thousands of collective agreements in effect at any one time.
A Comparative Perspective on Unionization
Figure 11.2 provides two key measures for 18 countries recent rates of union
membership20 and the change in union density since 1970. In terms of cur-
rent union density, Canada is higher than the United States, several European
countries, the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand, and Japan
and South Korea. But it is lower than the Scandinavian countries (Finland,
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
FIGURE 11.2 Unionization Rates in 18 Countries, 2010, and Absolute
Change, 1970-2010
1970-2010 absolute change% 2010 union density
Finland
70.0
Denmark 8.5
68.5
Sweden 0.2
68.2
Norway -2.2 1
54.8
Italy -1.5 I
35.5
Ireland -20.3
32.7
Austria -34.6
28.4
Canada –4.6
27.4
United Kingdom -18.6
26.4
New Zealand -35.2
20.8
Netherlands -18.4
18.6
Germany -13.4
18.6
Japan -16.7
18.3
Australia -25.9
18.1
Spain* 8.6
15.6
United States -15.6
11.4
Korea -3.3
9.7
France
-14.2
7.8
-40.0 -20.0 0.0 20.0 40.0 60.0 80.0
*Absolute change 198D-201 0, since 1970 data are not available.
Source: 1970, OECD Employment Outlook 2004. Table 3.3 -Trade union density and collective bargaining coverage in OECD
countries, 1970-2000, p. 145.
StatExtracts. Trade Union Density.
344 NEL
Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
Denmark, Sweden, and Norway), Austria, Ireland, and Italy. Union density
reveals only part of the strength of unions, however; collective bargaining
coverage also must be considered. In Europe, it is more common than in
Canada, the United States, or Japan for workers who are not union members
to have terms and conditions of employment set by collective agreements.
For example, in France, the Netherlands, and Germany, where relatively few
wage and salary earners are union members, between 80 and 90 percent are
covered by the provisions of collective agreements that these unions negotiate
(International Labour Office 1997).
What accounts for these cross-national differences? In North America,
key factors are management’s traditional opposition to unions, labour laws
that make the certification process for new bargaining units difficult, and a
decentralized industrial relations system based in local workplaces (Lipsig-
Mumme 2009). In Japan, where density and coverage are similar, collective
bargaining also is decentralized and firm based. But, unlike in North America
and Japan, in many western European countries there is much greater coordi-
nation within each industrial sector. This pattern is a result of highly central-
ized collective bargaining systems, supported by law, in which national unions
negotiate with large employers’ federations. Pay and other basic working con-
ditions are set nationally or by industrial sector, greatly reducing competition
among individual workplaces on these issues (unlike in Canada, where a firm
may resist union pay demands because it would increase its wage costs relative
to local competitors). So, in France, for example, despite a union density of
less than 10 percent (Figure 11.2), employer associations are legally required
to regularly negotiate broad agreements with unions, the benefits of which are
extended to virtually all employers and employees.
We noted earlier that Canadian union density has been in slow decline
over the last several decades. This fact is reflected in Figure 11.2, which also
indicates ongoing declines in union membership density in 13 of the other
17 countries listed. Declines in both density and coverage were more common
in nations with employer-centred, decentralized industrial relations systems-
notably the United States and Japan. Drops in coverage were less likely in
countries with strong sectoral or national bargaining regulated by the state to
balance employers’ and employees’ interests. The United Kingdom and New
Zealand, two countries with previously centralized systems, stand out with
declining density and coverage. In each case, market-oriented governments
deregulated and decentralized industrial relations systems in efforts to weaken
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
the power of unions basically, a shift to a more American model of industrial
relations (Freeman 1995). There are also signs in other European countries,
Australia, and New Zealand of a shift in collective bargaining from national
or sectoral levels down to firms, largely due to the introduction of more flex-
ible forms of work organization, although the extent and implications of this
decentralization process vary considerably (International Labour Office 1997).
In the field of comparative industrial relations there is growing interest in
the transformation of labour relations in countries with economic and political
histories quite different from the countries featured in Figure 11.2 (Bamber,
Lansbury, and Wailes 2011). Researchers are interested in unionization trends
in Asia, the former Soviet Union, and Central and South America. At issue
are how different patterns of economic development and political change
affect workers’ freedom to join unions and, equally important, the efficacy
of unions. In Mexico, union density has declined in the face of increasing
employer resistance to unions and the growing use of what are called “protec-
tion contracts,” whereby employers pay unions not to represent their mem-
bers’ interests in a workplace (Fairris and Levine 2004). In India, public-sector
unions, traditionally aligned with specific political parties, have been unsure
of how to respond to these same parties freezing public-sector wages or cutting
jobs (Roychowdhury 2003). And in former socialist countries such as China
and Russia, unions are struggling to find a new role (Clarke 2005). In China
economic reforms have reduced direct state regulation of labour relations,
but because unions remain integrated with management, they are unable to
consult or negotiate on behalf of workers (Clarke, Chang-Hee, and Qi 2004).
In Russia, former communist trade unions have pursued social partnerships to
reduce industrial conflict and protect members’ interests during the transition
to a market economy, but these initiatives have been largely ineffective because
of the history of union collaboration with government and employers during
the Soviet era (Ash win 2004).
An interesting new development, in response to the growth of globalized
production networks that link smaller producers, manufacturers, and distribu-
tion companies in one part of the world with massive distribution and retail
companies in another, is the emergence of transnational union networks that
allow unions in different parts of the world to cooperate in pursuing common
goals of safer and less exploitative working conditions and improved human
rights (Helfen and Fichter 2013).21 For example, unions representing seafarers
and port workers have formed a global alliance through the International
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
Transport Workers’ Federation, with its Flags of Convenience campaign
(Lillie 2005). Based in London, England, the federation coordinates actions
to maintain minimum pay standards, negotiate collective agreements with
shipowners, and prevent union-busting at ports around the world.
The Decline of U.S. Unions
While it has declined somewhat, Canadian union membership has remained
relatively stable compared to the United States and Japan which also have
employer-centred industrial relations (Lowe 1998). In fact, U.S. unions
appear to be in a struggle for survival (Devinatz 2013).22 Membership has
plunged from 20.1 percent of the workforce in 1983 to 11.4 percent in 2010
(Figure 11.2). Observers attribute this decline to a number of factors, but, in
particular, to fierce anti-union campaigns launched by some private-sector
employers and labour laws that permit these coercive tactics. In addition,
management innovations offering workers some form of decision-making
participation (see Chapter 9) have been used to keep unions out of many
workplaces, and public-sector downsizing and the privatizing of government
services have led to many fewer unionized jobs (Goldfield and Bromsen
2013). Where unions still exist, concession bargaining (unions agreeing to roll-
backs in wages, benefits, and collective rights) has frequently weakened them.
Significant, too, is the shift of employment away from the union strongholds
of the northeastern industrial regions to southern states, where right-to-work
laws undermine union security; under such laws, neither union membership
nor payment of union dues may be required as a condition of employment,
even if the workplace is unionized (Dixon 2008). 23
Another perspective is offered by Seymour Martin Lipset (1990) who
argues that a core difference between Canada and the United States is the
historically stronger commitment among Americans to individualistic values,
and Canadians’ greater sense of collective rights, which are more amenable
to unionization. However, a recent study found that American workers
were slightly more approving of unions than were Canadian workers, and
considerably more nonunion workers in the United States would vote for a
union if they had the opportunity (Lipset and Meltz 1997). Yet the actual
level of union membership in the United States, as we have seen, is about
one-third that of Canada. This paradox reflects the difference between deep-
rooted values, which underlie the institutions of labour relations, and more
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
immediate attitudes toward unions, which reflect current labour market condi-
tions and union strength. So, in the United States, unions are so weak today
that workers believe they should be stronger, while, in Canada, the greater
power of unions ends up being a source of criticism among many.
The U.S. experience shows the decisive role of legislation and manage-
ment opposition in encouraging or inhibiting free collective bargaining. Some
analysts argue, pessimistically, that unions lack the resources and supportive
public policies required for the massive new organizing successes needed to
grow their membership. However, other scholars detect a few signs of union
revival in the United States, which may reverse or at least slow down the trends
described above.24 Some local unions have developed innovative organizing
strategies that have appealed to low-wage workers, women, and racial and
ethnic minorities.
The Justice for Janitors campaign in Los Angeles is an example. As in many
North American cities, janitorial work in Los Angeles is done under short-term
contracts by companies who employ immigrant workers. Trying to counter
many years of industrial restructuring and de-unionization, in the 1990s the
Service Employees International Union launched a successful public campaign
to reunionize the industry and improve the lot of Central American immi-
grants. Many of these workers were women, and many had entered the United
States without documentation. The campaign focused on getting building
owners to help provide health and welfare benefits to janitors and their families
(Cranford 2004). Justice for Janitors shows how some U.S. unions are trying
to build broad coalitions with other community groups to address social justice
issues (Krinsky and Reese 2006), a strategy we earlier labelled as social move-
ment unionism. This strategy has also been effective in Canada, as in 2010
when the same union organized temporary foreign workers employed as jani-
tors at the University of Alberta and helped them negotiate a better wage and
overtime settlement with their private-sector employer to whom the university
had outsourced its janitorial work (Foster and Barnetson 2012).
Canadian Union Membership Patterns
Because of the large industrial and labour force changes that have occurred
over the past half century (see Chapters 3 and 6), the much higher rate of
union representation for men compared to women that once existed in Canada
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
has largely disappeared (Morissette, Schellenberg, and Johnson 2005). In fact,
in 2011, 31 percent of female employees (excluding the unemployed and self-
employed) belonged to a union, compared to 28 percent of men, reflecting the
large number of women employed in the public sector, which is much more
highly unionized.25 However, age remains a major source of variation in union
membership rates. While 30 percent of all Canadian employees were union-
ized in 2011, only 14 percent of young workers (ages 15 to 24 years) belonged
to unions, compared with 30 percent of 25- to 44-year-olds, 36 percent of
those ages 45 to 54 years, and 34 percent of employees 55 years of age and
older. Again, the explanation can be traced back to industry differences-
young workers are much more likely to be employed in the retail and food
and accommodation industries, which have low unionization rates (14o/o and
7o/o, respectively, in 2011).
Looking further at industry differences, education and public administra-
tion had the highest unionization rates in 2011 (68o/o and 67o/o, respectively).
The rate in the utilities sector was almost as high (64o/o), since many utility
companies are or were government owned and, hence, more highly unionized.
Health care’s unionization rate was somewhat lower (53 percent); although
almost all nurses are unionized, doctors are not, and neither are some other
health care support workers. In the transportation sector (e.g., railways, air-
lines, trucking), 41 percent of employees were unionized, as were 30 percent
in construction, and 25 percent in manufacturing. In sharp contrast, only
9 percent of employees in finance, insurance, and real estate were union mem-
bers. The unionization rate in agriculture was even lower (5o/o).
Provincial differences in labour legislation, industrial mix, and economic
performance also influence union membership. Newfoundland and Labrador
had the highest rate of unionization in 2011 (38o/o) because of the dispro-
portionately large size of the unionized public sector in a historically weak
economy and the strength of unions in the fishing industry. Quebec (36o/o),
Manitoba (35o/o), and Saskatchewan (34o/o) are next, for reasons that largely
reflect the political contexts more supportive of collective bargaining rights. In
2011, Ontario’s union density was 27 percent, while Alberta’s was the lowest in
the country at only 22 percent. Alberta’s industrial relations have moved closer
to the American model, given this province’s more restrictive labour legislation
and American-style nonunion human resource policies found in key industries
such as oil and gas (Noel and Gardner 1990; Block and Roberts 2000).
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
Other employment characteristics are also associated with union
membership, with workplace size being one of the strongest predictors. In
2011, 54 percent of employees in workplaces with more than 500 employees
were unionized, compared with 41 percent in workplaces with between 100
and 500 employees, 30 percent in 20 to 99 person workplaces, and only
13 percent in even smaller establishments. Full-time workers (33o/o) were
more likely to be unionized than part-time employees (25o/o), and perma-
nent employees had somewhat higher unionization rates than did temporary
workers (30°/o compared to 26o/o).
In short, the composition of the labour movement has been transformed
since the 1960s. The typical unionist today is a white-collar worker employed
in one of the service industries, quite likely in the public sector. Women have
joined the ranks of organized labour faster than men, and some experts claim
that even more women could become members if union recruitment practices
were less gender biased (Yates 2006). There also is the potential for growing
union representation among immigrants and racial minorities. Wages for
immigrants and visible minorities (often the same people) tend to be lower
than average (Chapter 5). With the exception of Black immigrant women,
immigrants and racial minorities are less likely to be union members than the
white majority (Reitz and Verma 2004). This gap in unionization is somewhat
reduced the longer that immigrants are in Canada. Union campaigns targeting
meatpacking, building services, and other sectors with high concentrations of
immigrants could speed up this process.
Canada’s Largest Unions
As already noted, total union density has declined somewhat in Canada over
the past three decades, in part, because of significantly reduced employment
in traditionally unionized sectors like manufacturing. In marked contrast,
union membership has continued to grow in the public sector and in some
other service industries. This trend began back in 1967 when the federal
government passed the Public Service Staff Relations Act, thus allowing col-
lective bargaining for federal civil servants. Provincial government employees
were already moving in this direction; Quebec public employees had received
collective bargaining rights in 1965. Unionism soon spread into municipal
governments, hospitals, schools, prisons, social services, and other expanding
publicly funded institutions.
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
Canada’s largest union is the Canadian Union of Public Employees
(CUPE) with members employed in a wide spectrum of jobs in municipali-
ties, social services, schools, libraries, colleges and universities, hospitals and
nursing homes, and many other public institutions. Because it had diversified
far beyond its core membership in public administration, CUPE had become
the largest union of any kind in Canada by the early 1980s. By the begin-
ning of this century, it already had close to half a million members, and by
2013, its membership had grown to 612,000. 26 The National Union ofPublic
and General Employees (NUPGE), the second-largest union in the country
(440,000 members in 2013), is also a public-sector union, as is the Public
Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC), the sixth-largest Canadian union, with
188,000 members. NUPGE is an umbrella organization for various federal
and provincial government unions while PSAC has members employed only
in federal government departments.
Three industrial unions are in third, fourth, and fifth place on the list of
Canada’s six largest unions. In mid-2013, the Canadian Auto Workers (CAW),
with close to 200,000 members, merged with the Communications, Energy
and Paperworkers Union of Canada (CEP), which was about half this size,
to form Unifor, a powerful Canadian-based industrial union with 309,000
members spread across the manufacturing, transportation, utilities, and many
service industries. The CAW had already been aggressively diversifying into
other sectors, including food services and casinos before the merger. The
merger made the new union the third-largest in Canada. The United Food
and Commercial Workers Union (UFCW Canada), with 245,000 members
in 2013, is the Canadian wing of a U.S.-based union. The fourth-largest
Canadian union, it has been actively trying to recruit workers in service
industries outside the food-processing sector, where it has been dominant.
In fifth place is the United Steelworkers union (231,000 members), also an
international union with its home base in the United States. It, too, has been
organizing workers in a wide range of manufacturing as well as service indus-
tries, including security guards, call-centre employees, and taxi drivers.
WOMEN AND UNIONS
While the unionization rate among female employees in Canada today is
higher than the male rate, historically the pattern was reversed. A frequent
explanation was that women would be less interested in unions because of
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
their family responsibilities and presumed lower commitment to paid employ-
ment. Hence, work problems that might prompt unionization among men
would be of secondary concern to women. Whether these assumptions were
ever supported by fact is difficult to determine, but they certainly have not
held true for the past four decades when women have been joining unions at
a much faster rate than men. During union-organizing campaigns in Ontario
during the 1980s and 1990s, for example, female-dominated workplaces were
far more likely to vote in favour of union representation than were male-
dominated workplaces (Yates 2000: 662-64).27 Women today may be more
pro-union than men because of their generally lower-paid and lower-status
positions in workplaces (Chapter 6). Historical differences in unionism across
industries are also important; men and women alike join unions and engage
in militant action according to the established patterns of their industries or
occupations (Briskin 2010). Thus, gender segregation in the labour market is
the key factor in gendered unionization patterns.
In addition, in the past, male-dominated unions have acted to keep
women out of certain jobs and, therefore, out of unions. In the early
20th century, for example, craft unions lobbied with middle-class reformers
to keep women out of the industrial labour force, allegedly to protect them,
but also because of fears that their wages would be undercut. In Canada, for
example, the failure of the 1907 strike by female Bell Telephone operators in
Toronto was partly due to the lack of support their unionization campaign
received from the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, an exclu-
sively male craft union (Sangster 1978).
Consequently, for many women the option of joining a union has not
existed. Only in the last three or four decades, for example, were major organi-
zing efforts launched in the largely female retail and financial industries, with
massive counterattacks by management in banks and in retail stores. Despite
a huge investment of organizing resources since the late 1970s, the Canadian
Labour Congress has achieved only limited success in unionizing banks (Lowe
1981). Thus, while some areas of the retail industry, such as grocery stores,
have achieved moderate levels of unionization, vast areas of the service sector
are still not organized.
Feminist scholars have cast new light on the collective struggles of women
to achieve fairness and equality through unions. In predominantly female
occupations, women have a long tradition of collective action. As professionals,
352 NEL
Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
female teachers have been organized for many decades, although sometimes
in professional associations rather than unions (Strong-Boag 1988). A his-
tory of union activism also exists among women in the garment and textile
industries, particularly in unions such as the International Ladies’ Garment
Workers (Gannage 1995; Frager 1992). Women also have exerted pressure
on the male-dominated unions to which they belong to have their concerns
addressed. As Pamela Sugiman shows in her study of women’s struggle for
gender equality within the Canadian wing of the United Auto Workers during
the 1960s, feminists active in the union used “gendered strategies of coping
and resistance,” drawing on women’s combined experiences as autoworkers,
unionists, wives, and mothers. Even so, male UAW members had difficulty
getting beyond their patriarchal ideology (Sugiman 1992: 24).
Because of such pressure from feminists within the organized labour
movement, pay equity (discussed in Chapter 6) has become a major workplace
objective for many unions. Perhaps the most prominent example was the
1991 strike on this issue by the Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC),
which represents federal civil servants. However, it took until the end of that
decade to reach a pay equity settlement with the government for these clerical
and administrative workers. Gillian Creese’s (1999) case study of the white-
collar workers’ union at BC Hydro shows how public-sector unions’ quest for
pay equity in the 1990s was made more difficult by the fact that it coincided
with employers downsizing, restructuring, and contracting-out work. Even
though the job hierarchy at BC Hydro did become more open to women and
members of racial minorities, union traditions and culture continued to reflect
the values and interests of white males.
Overall, however, women’s demands for equality of opportunities and
rewards in the workplace have had a major impact on Canadian unions. The
CLC elected its first female president in 1986, and CUPE, the largest union
in Canada, did the same in 1991. Women are making up a growing share
of elected union officers and paid staff, especially in public-sector unions,
many of which have developed policies and processes to ensure that women
have equal representation in leadership positions (Parker and Foley 2010).
Gradually, “women’s issues” which really are issues for all workers have
come to have higher stature in labour’s collective bargaining and social action.
Important bargaining items, at least for large unions, now include gender-
neutral contract language and clauses dealing with discrimination, sexual
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
harassment, family-related leave, childcare, and rights for part-time workers.
Organized labour’s success in achieving this bargaining agenda is obviously
crucial to its future.
MANAGEMENT OPPOSITION TO UNIONS
Despite laws giving each employee the right to join a union and to participate
in free collective bargaining, employer opposition to unionism has historically
been a major obstacle to putting these rights into practice. Before the intro-
duction of a legal framework for union certification and collective bargaining
procedures during World War II, many industrial disputes occurred over an
employer’s outright refusal to recognize the workers’ union. Surveying the his-
torical record, Pentland (1979: 19) observes, “It is sad but true that Canadian
employers as a group and Canadian governments have never taken a forward
step in industrial relations by intelligent choice, but have had to be battered
into it.” Interestingly, a contemporary study of the attitudes of managers
toward unions showed that Canadian managers were more hostile toward
unions than were managers in the United States. The researchers attribute this
unexpected difference to the fact that, compared to the Canadian situation,
U.S. unions are very weak and hence not seen as much of a threat by managers
(Campolieti, Gomez, and Gunderson 2013).
Even though disputes over union recognition are less common in Canada
today than they were in the past, there are still many reasons why the climate for
union organizing remains inhospitable (Bain 1978: 23). White-collar employees,
who form the majority of the workforce today, often have direct contact with
management and, therefore, may identify more closely with a company’s anti-
union position than do blue-collar workers. During union-organizing drives,
management usually prefers to deal with each employee individually. This tactic
creates a highly uneven playing field, pitting individual employees against the
power of a corporation. Workers join unions for the benefits, such as better
working conditions, higher wages, job security, or access to a grievance proce-
dure. Concrete proof that unions can “deliver the goods” is obviously lacking
in workplaces and industries that have never had high levels of unionization. In
some cases, a company union or employee association supported by the employer
creates the appearance of democratic employee representation. The difficulty of
overcoming such obstacles can discourage unions from launching recruitment
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
drives. Consequently, the option of joining a union has not been available to
many private-sector, white-collar workers.
New managerial strategies such as lean production and high-performance
workplace models that encourage employee participation and commitment
(Chapter 9) have also been used by large companies to maintain a union-free
workplace. The basic assumption, derived from the human relations manage-
ment tradition, is that if management treats employees well and listens to their
concerns, a union will be unnecessary. IBM is a good example of this approach
in action. In Scotland in the late 1970s, the corporation’s employees were
balloted at the request of the government’s industrial relations board to find
out whether they desired union recognition. Over 90 percent voted against
unionization (Dickson et al. 1988). This vote was not the result of corporate
coercion or intimidation. Rather, it reflected the attention and resources that
the company had devoted to employee relations. These human resource man-
agement policies produce a corporate culture based on strong employee loyalty
and identification with management’s goals (Keenoy 1985: 98-102). Some
Canadian firms, most notably the Hamilton steel producer Dofasco, have
developed their own unique brand of nonunion labour relations to obtain the
cooperation of employees (Storey 1983). They thus remain union-free.
Pradeep Kumar explains why innovative managerial strategies pose
difficulties for unions:
… unions and management have different views of the goals of work-
place innovations. Management goals are primarily efficiency-oriented.
The general mission of HRM [human resource management] is to
improve organizational effectiveness and achieve competitive advan-
tage through a more efficient utilization and development of human
resources…. Unions, on the other hand, are voluntary organizations
of workers that serve as their collective voice in order to improve their
physical, economic, social, and political well-being. The underlying
values of the unions are inherently pluralistic and collective.28
Even so, as Kumar (1995: 148) observes, some of the more successful innova-
tions of this kind suggest that union involvement may be a prerequisite. The
examples of Saturn, Shell, and NUMMI (see Chapter 9) make this point. But
in most cases, unions have tended to respond with either passive acceptance
of such new managerial initiatives or active rejection (Downie and Coates
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
1995). The CAW, after extensive experience with lean production, adopted
a policy of carefully assessing the benefits and costs of participation (CAW
1993: 12). Only if workers’ interests could be advanced and the union as an
organization strengthened would the CAW enter into such change programs
with management. Crucial ingredients are worker education and openness on
management’s part to share information (Martin 1995: 118-21).
An insightful study of a union’s experience with new management sys-
tems (Rinehart, Huxley, and Robertson 1997) focused on CAMI, a joint
venture between General Motors and Suzuki involving a new automobile
factory in Ingersoll, Ontario. The CAW represented the workers, making
CAMI one of the few North American “Japanese transplants” to be union-
ized. While the company’s position was that lean production had empowered
workers and, thus, made the enterprise highly competitive, the researchers
concluded that CAMI was just fine-tuning Fordism. Chronic understaffing
to reduce costs put intense pressure on workers who, despite the rhetoric
of involvement, were still doing largely low-skill and repetitive work with a
high risk of injury. “CAMI values” declined as worker discontent rose, and
the reality of conflict replaced the promise of “win-win.” Workers eventually
went on strike for five weeks in 1992. As a result of the strike, the union
gained more voice in setting production standards, in addition to negotiating
higher wages.
ORGANIZED LABOUR AND COLLECTIVE
ACTION
How do workers come to act collectively through unions in a capitalist society
where individualism is strongly valued and where employers may actively
oppose unions? There are two dilemmas that a worker must resolve if she or
he is to seriously consider joining a union or, if already a member, becoming
• •
an acttvtst.
The first is the free-rider problem. Just like social movements concerned
with environmental, peace, or feminist issues, unions provide collective
goods. In other words, all potential members have access to the organiza-
tion’s achievements a sustainable environment, a world with fewer weapons,
employment equity programs, or a grievance procedure and negotiated regular
wage increases whether or not they have assisted in achieving these objectives
356 NEL
Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
(Crouch 1982: 51-67). Mancur Olson (1965) asserts that individuals will not
naturally organize to further their collective interest. “The rational worker,”
explains Olson (1965: 88), “will not voluntarily contribute to a union pro-
viding a collective benefit since [s]he alone would not perceptibly strengthen
the union, and since [s]he would get the benefits of any union achievements
whether or not [s]he supported the union.” This insight provides one reason
for low unionization levels in European countries such as France and Germany.
Given that the centralized, state-regulated industrial relations systems in these
countries guarantee many non-members the full benefits of union-negotiated
wage agreements, the incentive to join is considerably reduced. In contrast, in
the United States where such legislation is absent, right-to-work laws weaken
unions by taking advantage of the free-rider dilemma.
Albert Hirschman’s (1970) comparison of exit and voice methods
of expressing discontent highlights the second dilemma. According to
Hirschman, a dissatisfied employee can either leave the employer or stay and
push for changes. The presence of a union increases the chances that the
employee will pursue the latter strategy. But in nonunion workplaces, the poor
employment conditions that could spark an organizing drive also increase the
chances of an individual opting to quit the job and look for another one. This
kind of response is a major obstacle to unionization in low-wage job ghettos
in the service industries today.
Joining and Becoming Active in a Union
The process of mobilizing initial support for a union requires obtaining
signed union cards from the majority of employees in a workplace. This
effort seldom succeeds without the financial assistance and organizational
expertise of an established union. Once organized, a union faces the problem
of rallying members in support of collective bargaining goals. According
to Charles Tilly’s (1979) research on the causes of social protest, what is
essential is a sense of shared identity with the group. Collective action in the
workplace will be easier when the work group is an important part of each
employee’s life. Strong social ties inside and outside the workplace integrate
employees into the group. Individual interests become synonymous with
group interests, acting as a springboard to collective action. Good examples of
groups possessing this solidarity are miners and members of other blue-collar
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
occupations, in which an occupational culture encompasses much of a
worker’s life. Levels of unionization and industrial militancy tend to be higher
under such conditions (Conley 1988).
Strong leadership is also critical. Especially important are organic leaders
who, by virtue of being part of the group, understand the experiences of
group members and can gain their trust better than an outsider could. As in
any formal organization, effective leaders will build up group solidarity, create
an awareness of common interests, map out a realistic program of action, and
seize opportunities to launch the plan. Also important is the environmental
context a supportive community, a hostile employer, or fair labour legisla-
tion, for example factors that can either nurture or dampen union activity.
Even if such conditions are favourable, a majority of employees may not sign
union cards, or unionized workers facing a deadlock in negotiations with man-
agement over a new collective agreement may not strike. Often missing is one
or more precipitating factors: an arbitrary change in work practices; the denial
of a long-awaited salary increase; the dismissal of coworkers; or a pent-up sense
of being treated unfairly by management. Such perceived injustices could be
the catalysts that mobilize workers to take collective action (Buttigieg, Deery,
and Iverson 2008).
Research on the inner workings of two Canadian unions gives us glimpses
of how some of these factors contribute to militancy. Julie White’s (1990: 147)
study of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW) quotes a worker
in a Saint John post office: “We’re a militant union, and I really believe that
Canada Post has made us that way.” This view is typical of CUPW members,
White argues. The union has developed a “culture of struggle,” based on the
belief that management does not have the interests of workers at heart and,
further, that any past improvements have been extracted from management
by militant action (Langford 1996). Against a background of unsuccessful
efforts to resolve disputes through negotiation, mediation, and conciliation,
this culture of struggle within CUPW has been cultivated by an openly demo-
cratic structure based on rank-and-file involvement. Similarly, Charlotte Yates
(1990) attributes the CAW’s success at resisting concessions demanded by
North American auto firms in the 1980s to its greater membership solidarity,
compared with the United Auto Workers union in the United States, which
agreed to concessions. Some of the key features of union organization that
contributed to CAW militancy were members’ influence over union decision
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
making and effective communication channels linking all levels in the union
(Yates 1990: 77).
Going on Strike
Strikes are high drama on the stage of industrial relations. Members of the
public typically view strikes as an inconvenience or even as a major social
problem. Many politicians and business leaders argue that strikes harm the
economy. The participants seldom want strikes, least of all the union mem-
bers, who will seldom recoup the wages lost should the dispute drag on. But if
conflict has been largely institutionalized, as described earlier in this chapter,
why do strikes occur at all? What motivates workers to strike, and what are
the larger social and economic implications of their actions?
Workers go on strike, that is, they deliberately stop working in order to
try to force their employer to agree to some set of demands. Since workers
are selling their labour power to an employer in return for wages, their ultimate
bargaining lever is to withdraw that labour. Similarly, employers may initiate
a lockout refusing to let workers come to work and, hence, be paid to get
workers to agree to some demand. Overall, strikes are infrequent events, as we
will see in the next section, and lockouts occur even less often. So, contrary to
what the media sometimes suggest, settlement of union-management disputes
without recourse to work stoppages is clearly the norm in Canada today.
But strikes are only one possible form of workplace conflict. Richard
Hyman distinguishes between unorganized and organized conflict (1978:
Chapter 3). The former is not a calculated group action and typically involves
workers responding to oppressive situations by individual absenteeism, quit-
ting, or sabotage. The latter is a planned collective strategy, the aim of which
is to change the source of the discontent. Canadian labour legislation insists
that strikes are legal only after the collective agreement has expired and specific
conditions, such as a strike vote, have been met. Unauthorized strikes during
the term of an agreement, often spontaneous responses by ordinary workers
to an immediate problem in the workplace, are known as wildcat strikes. 29 For
example, in April2013, two Edmonton jail guards were suspended for writing
e-mails to management about poor working conditions. Within hours the
next shift of guards was picketing the jail, and within several days, guards at
10 jails across Alberta had joined the wildcat strike. In addition, many court
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
workers, sheriffs, and parole officers, members of the Alberta Union of Public
Employees, left work to take part in a sympathy strike (Wingrove and Walton
2013). Strikes do not necessarily entail all members of the union leaving the
work site as a group. Under certain situations, rotating strikes across a number
of work sites, working-to-rule (doing the minimum required or refusing over-
time work), or staging work stoppages by “sitting down” on the job are variants
of strike activity that can also communicate workers’ demands
to management.
Research by Eric Batstone and his colleagues in a British automobile
factory highlights the day-to-day processes that may culminate in a strike
(Batstone, Boraston, and Frenkel 1978). Strikes, argue these researchers, do
not just happen. Rather, as a form of collective action, they require a high
degree of mobilization. A crucial factor is how the social relations within the
union allow some individuals or groups to rhetorically frame the course of
events leading up to a strike and identify potential strike issues. Typically,
most workers are reluctant to strike, so there will not be much support for a
strike until a vocabulary has developed to justify such action. This undertaking
involves the translation of specific grievances into the language of broad prin-
ciples and rights such as fairness and equality.
Nevertheless, sometimes strikes erupt because of grassroots protest by
workers who don’t need union organizers to frame the issues for them. Jerry
White (1990) provides an example in his analysis of the 1981 illegal strike
in Ontario hospitals by nonprofessional service workers, such as orderlies,
housekeepers, food handlers, lab technicians, and maintenance workers. While
the union leadership was generally not in support, the workers went on strike
anyway. Interestingly, the motivations to strike were different for women and
men involved. Male workers wanted higher pay, a reduced workload, and
guaranteed benefits. Women, in contrast, were far more concerned with how
cutbacks had led to deteriorating relationships with patients. In the end, the
workers won slight wage improvements, but at a price: thousands of strikers
were suspended, 34 were fired, and 3 union leaders were jailed.
Canadian Strike Trends
On an annual basis for more than the past two decades, work stoppages have
typically accounted for less than one-tenth of one percent of all working time
in Canada (Table 11.1). This pattern indicates that the seriousness of the
360 NEL
Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
strike “problem” often gets blown far out of proportion. Historically, though,
we can identify eras when strikes were much more common and widespread.
There have been four particularly stormy periods of industrial conflict in
Canada during the 20th century, gauged by the percentage of total working
time lost due to strikes and lockouts.
A number of issues were at stake in early-20th-century strikes. Skilled
artisans in the 19th century had been able to retain much of their craft
status, pride, and economic security through their control of the production
process. This privileged position was eroded by industrialization after 1900,
as advancing technology and scientific management techniques undermined
craftworkers’ autonomy. Thus, craftworkers angrily resisted rationalization
of their work, sparking many of the 421 strikes and lockouts that occurred
between 1901 and 1914 in southwestern Ontario manufacturing cities (Heron
and Palmer 1977).
Before union recognition and compulsory collective bargaining became
encoded in law during World War II, many strikes were precipitated by
an employer’s refusal to recognize the existence of a union, much less bar-
gain with it. The historic peak in labour militancy occurred at the end of
World War I. Workers across the country were protesting against oppressive
TABLE 11.1 Work Stoppages (Strikes or Lockouts) Involving One or More
Workers, Canada, 1976-2012, Multi-year Averages
1976-79
1980-84
1985-89
1990-94
1995-99
2000-D4
2005-9
201G-12
Average Average
Work Number of Days Lost
Stoppages Workers
during Year Involved
988 666,622
823 293,677
684 376,852
338 171,986
347 212,933
323 153,480
192 83,103
201 95,121
Workers per
Stoppage
654
445
562
375
635
538
350
478
Person Days per Worker
Not Worked Involved
7,51 0,188 14.5
6,401 ,314 18.5
3,97 4,936 14.4
2,11 0,056 12.8
2,666,832 12.7
2,349,609 14.8
1 ,949,830 24.0
1 ‘157 ,335 14.1
Days Lost:%
of Estimated
Working Time
0.33
0.26
0.17
0.09
0.09
0.07
0.05
0.03
Source: Adapted from data provided by Government of Canada, Labour Program.
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
working conditions, low wages, and declining living standards due to soaring
wartime inflation. Most of all, they wanted recognition of their unions.
Western Canadian unions were far more militant and inclined toward
radical politics than those in the rest of the country. Thus, in 1919, when
Winnipeg building and metal trades employers refused to recognize and
negotiate with unions over wage increases, the Winnipeg Trades and Labour
Council called a general strike.
A massive display of working-class solidarity erupted, bringing the local
economy to a halt. Sympathy strikes spread to other cities across Canada
and even into the United States. The battle lines of open class warfare (one
of the few instances of this in Canadian history) were drawn when, fearing a
revolution, Winnipeg’s upper class fought back with the help of the state. For
several days, strikers squared off against police and employer-sponsored armed
vigilantes. The confrontation ended in violence after the Royal Northwest
Mounted Police, sent in by the federal government, charged a crowd of dem-
onstrators. Strike leaders were arrested and jailed, while the workers’ demands
were still unmet (Bercuson 1974; Jamieson 1971).
Strike activity declined with rising unemployment during the Depression
of the 1930s. As a rule, unions are less likely to strike in tough economic
times. Conversely, when industry is booming and there is a relative shortage of
labour, reflected in low unemployment rates, a strike becomes a more potent
bargaining lever. The World War II era marked the rise of industrial unionism
in manufacturing industries. Organizing drives accelerated as military produc-
tion demands helped to restore the ailing economy. Again, union recognition
was a dominant issue, driving workers in automobile factories, steel plants,
and mines onto the picket line. As mentioned earlier in the chapter, the 1945
Ford strike led to the introduction of the Rand Formula to protect union
security and ensure orderly collective bargaining (Russell 1990).
Canada experienced a series of strikes in the mid-1960s. The fact that
about one-third of these work stoppages involved wildcat strikes (mainly over
wages) led the government to perceive a serious crisis in industrial relations.
A task force, chaired by Professor H. D. Woods of McGill University, was
set up to investigate the causes of industrial unrest and to recommend ways
of achieving labour peace. Yet rampant inflation during the 1970s, and an
increasingly militant mood among public-sector workers, escalated labour-
management confrontations.
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
The most recent strike wave reached its apex in 1976. The Trudeau gov-
ernment’s imposition of wage and price controls in 1975 as part of its anti-
inflation program made strikes over higher wages a futile exercise (Reid 1982).
But in the 20 years following 1976, lost time due to work stoppages dropped
to post-World War II lows. The recession-plagued 1980s and 1990s damp-
ened strike activity, a trend also evident in the recession that began in 2008.
Table 11.1 profiles the labour relations patterns of the past three decades
by highlighting four ways to look at strike activity: frequency (number of work
stoppages), size (number of workers involved), duration (days lost), and overall
volume (days lost as a percentage of total working time). A series of multi-
year averages clearly demonstrates how strike activity in terms of frequency,
size, and overall volume has declined, although strike duration has not. For
example, in the late 1970s, an average of 988 work stoppages per year involved
almost 700,000 workers. Comparable figures for 2010-12 were an average of
201 work stoppages annually involving about 95,000 workers. What is most
striking about these trends is that, even in the late 1970s, strikes and lockouts
resulted in only one-third of one percent of estimated annual working time. By
2010-12, this figure was 10 times smaller. In short, while strikes and lockouts
get a great deal of media attention, they no longer have much of a cumulative
effect on economic productivity.
A Comparative Perspective on Strikes
How does Canada’s strike record compare with that of other industrial
nations? Even though there are some cross-national differences in how strikes
are defined and measured (Ross, Bamber, and Whitehouse 1998), we can,
nonetheless, get a rough idea of where Canada stands in this regard. Based
on the annual averages of working days lost in nine industrialized countries
between 1970 and 1992, Canada’s rate was the second highest, with Italy first
(Adams 1995: 512). But as we have seen in Table 11.1, the earlier years in this
period were historically high for Canada, inflating the overall average. By the
mid-1990s, Canada was reporting significantly lower strike volume than Italy,
France, or Australia, but considerably higher than other countries, in par-
ticular, the United States and the Netherlands (International Labour Office
1997: 249-50). It is also important to note that the strike volume in highly
industrialized countries had declined in general, in large part, because of
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
difficult economic times and high unemployment through much of the 1990s.
Some experts suggest that while strikes are less frequent, when they do happen
they are now more intense confrontations (Aligisakis 1997).
There are major institutional differences that account for international
variations in strikes. For instance, in Italy, disputes, while short, are frequent
and involve many workers. By contrast, the Swedish system of centralized bar-
gaining, along with the country’s powerful unions and their huge strike funds,
means that a work stoppage could quickly cripple the economy. This aware-
ness imposes much pressure to peacefully resolve potential disputes. In Japan,
unions are closely integrated into corporations in what really amounts to a type
of company unionism. Strikes are infrequent; workers voice their grievances
by wearing black armbands or by making other symbolic gestures calculated
to embarrass management. German union-management collective bargaining
is centrally coordinated but, at the individual workplace, employee-elected
works councils frequently negotiate employment conditions (see Chapter 12).
German laws require these participatory councils; the same laws also make it
very difficult to strike. Even though the strike rate in Canada is relatively low
now, the fact that employees in this country have to confront employers when
seeking collective bargaining has created a far more adversarial system.
Thus, legislation governing the structure of collective bargaining is vitally
important. The North American system of bargaining is highly decentralized
and fragmented, involving thousands of separate negotiations between a local
union and a single employer, each of which could result in a strike. Low-strike
nations such as Austria, Germany, the Netherlands, and Sweden avoid these
problems by having national or industry-wide agreements, and by legislating
many of the quality-of-working-life issues that Canadian unions must nego-
tiate with employers on a piecemeal basis.
There are also major industrial and regional variations in strikes within
Canada, which may be the result of how industries are organized. The least
strike-prone industries are finance, trade, and services, which makes sense
given their low unionization levels. Of the highly unionized industries, mining
has historically been the most strife ridden. Similarly, Newfoundland and
Labrador and British Columbia have had significantly higher-than-average
strike rates because of their high concentration of primary and other strike-
prone industries.30 With their isolation hypothesis, Kerr and Siegel (1954)
provide one explanation of these differences, writing that isolated workers
364 NEL
Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
“live in their own separate communities: the coal patch, the ship, the water-
front district, the logging camp, the textile town. These communities have
their own codes, myths, heroes, and social standards.”31 Canada has always
had large numbers of remote, resource-based, single-employer towns (Lucas
1971), where a combination of social isolation and a limited occupational
hierarchy is more likely to mould workers into a cohesive group in opposition
to management.
CONCLUSION
Canada’s labour force has been growing steadily over the past several decades
(Chapter 3). Union membership has also been growing, although not as
quickly. There were more than 4.5 million Canadian union members in 2012.
As for union density, it has remained around 30 percent since the beginning
of this century (Figure 11.1). Compared to some other Western industrial-
ized countries, however, organized labour in Canada remains relatively strong
(Figure 11.2), at least in terms of numbers. But strike activity has clearly
declined in Canada over the past 35 years (Table 11.1). Does this decline
signify that the Canadian industrial relations system has reached some kind
of equilibrium, with all three parties involved employers, unions, and the
state being relatively satisfied with the outcomes?
Our assessment is that it does not. As we observed in Chapter 10, the
labour process can be conceptualized as a shifting .frontier of control (Friedman
1977) in which, at different times, employers and employees gain or lose
power. The last several decades have been a time in which employers have been
gaining the upper hand. As we have noted, union density has increased signifi-
cantly in the public sector CUPE and NUPGE are the two largest unions in
the country. However, for public-sector workers, their employer (typically the
federal or a provincial government) is also the rule maker, and the Canadian
state has not always been the “impartial umpire” that William Lyon Mackenzie
King envisioned a century ago.
During the 1990s, Canadians began to see nurses, teachers, librar-
ians, social workers, government clerks and, in some cases where they were
unionized, even university professors going on strike for higher wages and
improved working conditions, and to maintain the quality of public services.
In response, governments frequently resorted to legislated restrictions on
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
strike action. Furthermore, the deficit-cutting strategies of both provincial
and federal governments often involved imposing wage rollbacks through leg-
islation, effectively suspending the collective bargaining rights of government
employees (Reshef and Rastin 2003).
This trend has continued. In late 2013, for example, the federal
Conservative government included in its budget implementation act (Bill
C-4) a number of proposals that would restrict the rights of federal govern-
ment workers. Included in the list was a planned change to the Public Service
Labour Relations Act (PSLRA) that would give the government the right to
decide, without any neutral third party involved as had been the case for
many years, which of its employees were providing essential services. Once
declared as essential, these workers would lose their right to strike. 32 About
the same time, Canada Post (a Crown corporation) signalled that it intended
to demand large cuts to the pension plan previously negotiated with CUPW
(McKenna 2013). In late 2013, as well, the Alberta government introduced
Bill 46, the Public Services Salary Restraint Act, which would force the
Alberta Union of Provincial Employees (AUPE) to accept whatever wage
rates the government proposed if a negotiated settlement was not reached by
January 31, 2014 (Ibrahim 2013). In the past, if the union and the employer
(the Alberta government) could not reach a satisfactory settlement, the law
required binding arbitration whereby a neutral third party would decide what
was fair.
In the private sector, the Canadian labour relations environment has also
generally become more restrictive. Concession bargaining, or employers trying
to force unions into accepting wage rollbacks, reduced benefits packages and
pensions, and greater flexibility in hiring practices, has been widespread for the
past several decades. Many large employers have reduced their costs and also
the need to deal with unions by outsourcing much of their activity to non-
unionized suppliers, in Canada or outside the country. Some employers with
unionized workforces have moved quickly to lock out their workers, hoping
to force them into accepting an offer. Applications for court injunctions and
legislation to end strikes have been another employer strategy. In other cases,
rather than trying to negotiate a settlement, employers have quickly brought
in nonunionized workers, hoping to eventually force unions into accepting
offers they considered to be unsatisfactory.
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
So, the declining strike rates in Table 11.1 clearly do not signify that
organized labour in Canada is satisfied with changes in the industrial relations
climate which some analysts see as having placed severe restrictions on free col-
lective bargaining. 33 It remains to be seen whether and where the huge unions
in the public sector begin to push back more aggressively to protect the job
security and economic well-being of their members. 34 As for the private sector,
it will be interesting to see whether unions’ current organizing efforts in the
service industries are effective, and whether the 2013 merger of the Canadian
Auto Workers union and the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers
(CEP) union into Unifor will shift the balance of power in the labour relations
“frontier of control.”35 The involvement of Canadian unions in transnational
union networks may also give them some new ideas and increased energy. In
both sectors, it remains possible that a shift in tactics from business unionism
to social or social mobilization unionism will have positive outcomes for orga-
nized labour.
In Chapter 12, we turn our attention to alternative approaches to eco-
nomic organization that might move us beyond the adversarial nature of
contemporary labour-management relations toward institutional structures
that more fully recognize the rights and potential of workers and more effec-
tively address the social problems of conflict and inequality.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
1. Public opinion in Canada is divided over the role of unions in the
economy and society. Do you think that unions have outlived their use-
fulness? Why or why
not?
2. What are the greatest challenges Canadian unions face today, and what
strategies will most likely help them meet these challenges?
3. Do unions contribute to more or less income inequality in society? Could
they have a larger effect?
4. In the typical strike or lockout, who are most often the winners and the
losers? Why?
5. Would you join a union if one existed in your workplace? Why or why
not?
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
WORK AT THE MOVIES
• On Strike: The Winnipeg General Strike, 1919 (directed by Joe MacDonald
and Clare Johnstone Gilsig, 1991, 19:46 minutes). This NFB docu-
mentary focuses on the Winnipeg General Strike, which began with
the building and metal trades and culminated with over 30,000
workers walking off their jobs. It is available through the National Film
Board of Canada: http:/ /www3.nfb.ca/ objectifdocumentaire/index. php?
mode=view&language=english &filmld=3 3.
• Matewan (directed by John Sayles, 1987, 135 minutes). This historical
film is based on the Battle of Matewan, a deadly confrontation between
coal miners struggling to form a union and company operators in West
Virginia.
• 24 Days in Brooks (directed by Dana Inkster, 2007, 42:03 minutes). Set
in Brooks, Alberta, this NFB documentary tracks the transformation of
a socially conservative, white town. As immigrants and refugees migrate
to Brooks for work in a slaughterhouse, the town experiences its first-ever
strike. The documentary is available through the National Film Board of
Canada: http:/ /www.nfb.ca/film/24_days_in_brooks.
• Bread & Roses (directed by Ken Loach, 2000, 110 minutes). Two Latina
cleaners fight for the right to unionize in this film based on the Justice for
Janitors campaign of the Service Employees International Union.
SOUNDS OF WORK
• “There Is Power in a Union” (Billy Bragg). This pro-union song asserts the
potential power of collective action.
• “General Strike” (D.O.A.). Canadian punk rockers put forth a straight-
forward message about collective action, encouraging listeners to stand up
and unite.
• “Horses” (Rheostatics). After going on strike, workers watch from the
outside as replacement workers are brought in. Some say this song was
inspired by the long and violent 1986 strike by the United Food and
Commercial Workers against the Gainers meat-packing company in
Edmonton, owned by Peter Pocklington.
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
• “Solidarity Forever” (Ralph Chaplin). Written in 1915 for the Industrial
Workers of the World, this song carries a strong message of the power of
worker solidarity. It retains relevance with many unions today.
NOTES
1. http:/ /www.thespec.com/news-story/2222372-u-s-steel-lockout-over/ [retrieved
December 8, 2013].
2. http://www. thestar.com/business/20 13/07 I 18/ caw _reaches_ tentative_ deal_ with_
cocacola_over_strike_in_brampton.html
[retrieved December 8, 2013].
3. http://www. cbc.ca/ news/ canada/ calgary/ superstore-strike-ends-as-union-
members-agree-to-new-deal-1.1930881 [retrieved December 8, 2013].
4. http://www. cbc. ca/ news/ canada/ nova-scotia/halifax-coffee-shop-workers-in-
unique-drive-to-unionize-1.1361776 [retrieved December 8, 2013].
5. http: I lwww. h uffington post. ca/20 13 I 0 8/ 16/walmart-canada-union-
decertifies_n_3769807.html [retrieved December 8, 2013]
6. Cited with permission from EKOS Research Associates; all rights reserved.
7. http:/ /www.cbc.ca/ news/ canada/unions-on-decline-in-private-sector-1.1150 562
[retrieved December 8, 2013].
8. http://www. torontosun.com/20 11/06/29 I striking-unions-offside-with-public
[retrieved December 8, 2013].
9. This systems approach to industrial relations is contrasted with a political
economy approach by Taras, Ponak, and Gunderson (2005).
10. Canada. (1969). Canadian Industrial Relations: The Report of the Task Force on
Labour Relations. Ottawa: Queen’s Printer, p. 19.
11. Card, Lemieux, and Riddell (2004) and Gustafsson and Johansson (1999) pro-
vide a cross-national analysis. Brady, Baker, and Finnigan (2013) present U.S.
data showing that higher levels of unionization are associated with lower rates of
working poverty.
12. For historical accounts of the rise of the Canadian labour movement, see Heron
(1989), Smucker (1980: Chapters 7 and 8), and Godard (1994: Chapter 4).
13. http:/ /www.labour.gc.ca/ eng/ resources/ info/tools/ directory _labour_
organizations/organizations.shtml [retrieved December 15, 2013].
14. See also Briskin (2010), Bartkiw (2008), Russell (1990), and Kettler, Struthers,
and Huxley (1990). Similar concerns about collective bargaining in the United
States and the United Kingdom are discussed in Freeman (1995).
15. See endnote 13 for an online source showing unions’ Canadian or U.S.
affiliations.
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
16. See Gindin (1995) and Wells (1997) for discussions of the CAW’s shift away
from principled militancy to more pragmatic cooperation with management.
Yates (1998) and Eaton and Verma (2006) examine how the CAW has met the
challenges of renewal and growing membership diversity.
17. See Roberts (1990). The Communications Workers, the Energy and Chemical
Workers, and the Canadian Paperworkers Union later merged to form the
Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union of Canada.
18. On nonunion forms of representation, see Taras (2002) and Lowe and
Schellenberg (200 1: 25-29).
19. See endnote 13.
20. These union membership rates are based on all wage and salary earners (including
agricultural workers and managers) so the Canadian rate is lower than the rate
reported in Figure 11.1.
21. Dehnen (2013) refers to such networks as global union federations, an indication
that this new field of study is still developing a common vocabulary. See also
Levesque and Murray (2010) and Youngdahl (2008).
22. Kimeldorf (2013) provides a useful historical account of the growth of the U.S.
union movement a century earlier.
23. Bernhardt, Spiller, and Polson (2013) discuss violations of labour legislation in
the United States. See Ponak and Taras (1995) on right-to-work legislation from
a Canadian perspective.
24. On union renewal, see Voss and Sherman (2000) and Rose and Chaison (2001).
Kay (2011) argues that the legal frameworks established by the North American
Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) allowed collaborating U.S. and Mexican unions
to gain strength and resist globalization trends.
25. All 2011 unionization rates discussed in this section are from Uppal (2011). For
additional data on unionization rates from 1981 through 2012, by occupation,
industry, province, gender, and detailed age groups, see Galarneau and Sohn
(2013).
26. Union membership data from Government of Canada Labour Program (2013):
http:/ /www.labour. gc.ca/ eng/ resources/info/ tools/ directory _labour_ organizations/
organizations.shtml [retrieved December 16, 2013].
27. On women in unions, see also Yates (2006), Briskin and McDermott (1993),
Creese (1999), and Gannage (1995).
28. Kumar, Pradeep. (1995). Unions and Workplace Change in Canada. Kingston,
ON: IRC Press, pp. 148-49.
29. See Gouldner (1955) for a classic study of a wildcat strike. Jamieson (1971:
Chapter 4) and Zetka (1992) discuss wildcat strikes during the decades after
World War II in Canada and the United States, respectively.
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Chapter II: Unions and Industrial Relations
30. Gunderson, Hyatt, and Ponak (1995); see also Craven (1980: Chapter 8).
31. Kerr and Siegel (1954: 191). For critiques, see Shorter and Tilly (1974: 287-305)
and Stern (1976).
32. http: I /www.h uffington post. ca/larry- rousseau/ turning- back-the-clock-
50 b 4325416.html. —
33. See Panitch and Swartz (1993), Russell (1990), and Godard (1997).
34. Cunningham and James (2010) discuss strategies used by public-sector unions in
the United Kingdom to counter outsourcing of jobs.
35. Larine (2013) describes the union politics leading to the formation ofUnifor and
argues that the most vulnerable workers in Canada are not really the concern of
Canada’s largest unions.
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discussed in Chapter 9, see the changes taking place in today’s workplace as
largely positive, empowering workers and increasing their job satisfaction.
Sennett is almost uniformly negative in his assessment of the alienating impact
of contemporary work. These divergent perspectives on work experiences raise
fundamental questions about whether, compared to earlier generations of
workers, today’s workers, individually and through their own organizations,
are in a better or worse position to negotiate greater control over the labour
process. However, as we have concluded a number of times in earlier chapters,
there is not a single answer. Instead, increased labour market polarization may
mean greater control (and less alienation) among well-paid and empowered
“knowledge workers” and professionals, and less control (and more alien-
ation) among poorly paid workers in low-complexity jobs and precarious
employment situations.
WORK AND STRESS
If we take a broader work and well-being approach to the subject of how
workers experience and react to their jobs, both physical and psychological
reactions to work become part of our subject matter. This approach also
encourages us to consider how paid work might affect an individual’s life in
the family and the community. Consequently, workplace health and safety
issues, discussed in Chapter 12, are also relevant to discussions of work and
well-being, as are concerns about balancing work and family responsibilities
(Chapter 7). Here, we look more specifically at work and stress.
Defining Work-Related Stress
Defining work-related stress independent of job dissatisfaction is not easy.
In fact, some researchers studying stress and its consequences rely on
measures that might, in a different context, be considered indicators of job
dissatisfaction. But there are important distinctions to be made between job
dissatisfaction, anxiety and tension about work, job stress, and job burnout
(Humphrey 1998: 4-9). It is possible to feel dissatisfied with work, perhaps
even a little anxious about some aspects of a job, without experiencing a
great deal of stress. But work-related stress, with its physical and mental
symptoms, can also accumulate to the point of burnout, where an indi-
vidual is unable to cope in the job (Maslach and Leiter 1997). It is useful,
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then, to conceive of work-related stress as a many-sided problem with
job dissatisfaction as one component that can lead to serious mental and
physical health problems.
It is also helpful to distinguish stressors, or strains, from an individual
worker’s reactions to them. Stressors are objective situations (e.g., noisy
work environments or competing job demands) or events (a dispute with a
supervisor or news that some workers are about to be laid off) that have the
potential to produce a negative subjective or physical response. Thus, work-
related stress is an individually experienced negative reaction to a job or work
environment. Obviously, the absence of stress does not imply the presence of
job satisfaction. What distinguishes stress reactions are the wide range of ill
health symptoms, both physical and psychological.
The Incidence of Work-Related Stress
In 2000, Statistics Canada’s national General Social Survey revealed that
one-third (34o/o) of Canadian workers had experienced stress in the previous
year due to “too many demands or too many hours.” Fifteen percent of
the employed survey participants reported stress from “poor interpersonal
relations” (with supervisors or coworkers), and 13 percent had felt stressed
because of the risk of accident or injury. The same proportion (13o/o) reported
stress over possible job loss (Williams 2003: 24).
A decade later, in 2010, the General Social Survey included a somewhat
different question about stress. The study showed 27 percent of working adults
(ages 20 to 64) stating that, on most days, their lives were “quite stressful” or
“extremely stressful.” Sixty-two percent of these highly stressed adults said that
work was their main source of stress. In other words, 17 percent of working
adults (about 2.3 million people) typically felt highly stressed because of their
job on an almost-daily basis (Crompton 2011). Clearly, work-related stress is
not an isolated phenomenon.
Causes and Consequences of Work-Related Stress
In their study of workers who had lost well-paying manufacturing and
resource-sector jobs in five rural Ontario communities, and who were now
struggling with unemployment or low-paying, part-time service-sector jobs,
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Anthony Winson and Belinda Leach (2002: 127-30) provided graphic
examples of work-related stress. These workers and their families worried
constantly about paying bills, making do with less, losing the family home,
having to rely on food banks, and dealing with medical expenses that used to
be covered by benefits packages.
Work-related stress, however, is not experienced only by low-income
earners. The 2010 national survey discussed earlier revealed that more than
half of the working Canadians feeling highly stressed on an almost-daily
basis because of their work were in management, professional, or technical
occupations, and almost three-quarters were college or university educated
(Crompton 2011).
A vast amount of research has drawn our attention to the many different
kinds of stressors in the work environment (Barling, Kelloway, and Frane
2005; Davis et al. 2008). We have already mentioned stress resulting from
concerns about job insecurity. In addition, continual exposure to health and
safety hazards, working in a physically uncomfortable setting, shift work, or
long hours can all be stressors. Similarly, fast-paced work (especially when the
pace is set by a machine), performance-based pay systems that link output
to the amount earned (Ganster et al. 2011), lean production management
approaches that continually push workers to increase output (Carter et
al. 2013), and inadequate resources to complete a task can generate much
stress for workers. The experience of constant organizational restructuring or
increased productivity expectations from managers also causes stress. 15 In a
recent study of Ontario nurses, for example, perceptions of work intensifica-
tion resulting from organizational restructuring led to significantly increased
stress and, in turn, reduced job satisfaction (Zeytinoglu et al. 2007). Working
at tasks that under-utilize one’s skills and abilities, that do not meet one’s
expectations for the job, or that allow little latitude for decision making
are also stressful for many workers. An unreasonable and overly demanding
supervisor can create a great deal of stress, as can bullying by coworkers or
a supervisor. 16 Finally, workers might experience stress as a result of sexual
harassment or from discrimination in the workplace based on gender, race,
sexual orientation, religion, or disability.
As Chapter 7 documented, equally stressful for some workers, especially
women, are the pressures of meeting family responsibilities while trying to
devote oneself to a job or career (Ergeneli, Ilsev, and Karapinar 201 O) .17
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As one of the young, university-educated women interviewed by Gillian
Ranson lamented:
In this job, in this particular job, I don’t think I could do justice to the
child and I’ve made the decision that … either after maternity leave or
in the near future, I’m quitting, because it’s not fair. I come home, I
can’t even talk to my husband because I’m so wound up, stressed out. 18
Research in many different settings has shown that physical reactions to
stress can include fatigue, insomnia, muscular aches and pains, ulcers, high
blood pressure, and even heart disease. Depression, anxiety, irritation, low
self-esteem, and other mental health problems are among the documented
psychological reactions to stressful work. 19 Given these widespread and serious
physical and mental health consequences, work-related stress is also costly for
employers and the economy, since it is associated with reduced productivity,
absenteeism, and disability claims (Crompton 2011).
The “Demand-Control” Model of Work-Related Stress
A useful perspective for understanding workplace stress is the demand-control
model, which redefines stressors as job demands but also introduces the con-
cept of worker control (Karasek 1979).20 It distinguishes between active jobs,
where individual decision-making potential is high, and passive jobs, where it
is largely absent. If psychological demands on a worker are high, but a worker
can do something about them, stress is less likely to result. If demands are
high and control is low, stress, along with the health problems that can follow,
is far more often the outcome.
From this perspective, we can understand why researchers have repeatedly
demonstrated that highly routinized, machine-paced work is extremely
stressful. Assembly-line jobs are often considered to be among the most
stressful. Demand is never-ending, the physical work can be extremely taxing,
and worker control is virtually absent (Landsbergis, Cahill, and Schnall
1999). Earlier, we suggested that instrumental work attitudes may be a
coping mechanism the paycheque becomes the only relevant work reward.
Some assembly-line workers rely on alcohol or drugs to get through a shift
(De Santis 1999: 111-14). Others adapt to assembly-line work by “tuning
out” the boredom and waiting for the chance to get away from the job.
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Ben Hamper, better known as “Rivethead,” describes how he was introduced
to his new job on a truck-assembly line in Flint, Michigan:
“Until you get it down, your hands will ache, your feet will throb and
your back will feel like it’s been steamrolled … ”
”Are there any advantages to working down here?” I asked pitifully.
The guy scratched at his beard. “Well, the exit to the time clocks and
the parking lot is just down these stairs. Come lunchtime or quittin’
time, you can usually get a good jump on the rest of the pack.”21
But psychological problems can also arise. Three decades ago, Robert Linhart
described an extreme reaction to the assembly line in a French automobile
factory:
He was fixing parts of a dashboard into place with a screwdriver. Five
screws to fix on each car. That Friday afternoon he must have been
on his five hundredth screw of the day. All at once he began to yell
and rushed at the fenders of the cars brandishing his screwdriver like
a dagger. He lacerated a good ten or so car bodies before a troop of
white and blue coats rushed up and overcame him, dragging him,
panting and gesticulating, to the sick bay.22
Highly routinized, monotonous, mechanized, and closely supervised jobs are
also found in the service industries. A 1980s study of Canada Post mail sorters
and letter carriers in Edmonton revealed that the most stressful job in the organi-
zation involved “keying” postal codes using automated machinery. The relentless
pace of the machinery, conflicting demands imposed by management, constant
repetition, and lack of challenges and job autonomy were associated with dimin-
ished mental and physical health among coders. The use of pain relievers and
tranquillizers was significantly higher among the coders using automated tech-
nology compared with those sorting mail by hand (Lowe and Northcott 1986).
The widespread adoption of electronic communications systems in the
contemporary workplace has created some highly rewarding and complex jobs,
but also some new types of work that can be extremely routinized and, hence,
very stressful. Most prominent here are jobs in call centres that require workers
to repeatedly try to contact members of the public, either to sell products or
services or to solicit their opinions on various topics (Chapter 10). The same
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technologies have also increased the scope for electronic surveillance, yet another
new source of stress. This practice might involve monitoring the conversations
of teleworkers and others who deal with the public by telephone, keeping track
of Internet searches made by employees, recording output in settings where
workers use computers or electronic communications systems, and even deliv-
ering electronic warnings to those performing below certain levels. 23
Frederick Taylor would have applauded such high levels of work routiniza-
tion and worker control, but employees do not. A data entry clerk whose work
group had been told that they had not met management productivity goals the
previous week comments:
I feel so pressured, my stomach is in knots. I take tons of aspirin, my
jaws are sore from clenching my teeth, I’m so tired I can’t get up in
the morning, and my arm hurts from entering, entering, entering.24
A Canadian call-centre employee describes the workplace in similar terms:
They count on high turnover because of the way this business is run,
there is a very high burnout level. People burn out quickly because
of the stress, because of the pressure, because of the way people are
treated, because of the degrading nature of the work. 25
It is not difficult to see how such working conditions high demands and
virtually no worker control can be stressful, and can lead to physical and
psychological ill health.
The “Person-Environment Fit” Model
A different theoretical model of work-related stress emphasizes the person-
environment fit. According to this model, stress results when there is a
significant gap between an individual’s needs and abilities and what the
job offers, allows, or demands (Johnson 1989). To take a specific example,
reports of stress and burnout among social workers, teachers, and nurses are
common. Individuals in these helping professions have work orientations and
expectations (the desire to solve problems and help people) and useful skills
(training in their profession) that are frequently thwarted by the need to deal
with an excessive number of clients, limited resources, and administrative
policies that make it difficult to be effective. 26
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