Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-15T03:25:05.831Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Moderated Mobilization: A New Model of Enterprise-level Collective Bargaining in South China

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 August 2019

Siqi Luo
Affiliation:
Center for Chinese Public Administration Research/School of Government, Sun Yat-Sen University, China. Email: [email protected].
Tao Yang*
Affiliation:
Tsinghua Institute for Advanced Study in Humanities and Social Sciences, China.
*
Email: [email protected] (corresponding author).

Abstract

In response to a series of strikes in south China in 2010, a new model of collective bargaining has emerged, featuring what this article describes as “moderated mobilization.” Distinct from what is typically known as China's quadripartite industrial relations system, whereby workers are separated from the party-state, official trade unions and employers, this model shows workers and enterprise-level trade unions in collaboration with one another. According to our observations from 2012 to 2017, some enterprise unions have successfully mobilized workers throughout the collective bargaining process. These unions are democratically elected by workers and are relatively independent from the official authorities. At the same time, they have “moderated” such mobilization particularly to reduce labour militancy, given the political and institutional constraints within which they must work. The implication of this new model is significant. Although it might be far from solving the quadripartite dilemma, it has signalled an increase in local initiatives among enterprise unions – a previously neglected but pragmatically favourable channel for workers.

摘要

摘要

本文提出,2010 年被用以解决发源于南中国的罢工潮的集体谈判,正在发展成为中国集体谈判实践的一种新模式,即 “有节制的动员”。在这种模式中,工人与企业工会密切合作,打破了关于中国产业关系具有四方主体的一般认知,即除了国家、雇主和官方工会三方之外,工人作为单独一方。基于从 2012 年到 2017 年的观察和深度访谈,我们发现南中国的一些由工人民主选举产生的企业工会成功地把工人动员到集体谈判的整个过程中。企业工会相对独立于官方力量。与此同时,这些企业工会也有意 “节制” 对工人的动员,在其必须面对的政治和制度的约束下降低对抗性。这一新模式虽然并不足以完全解决中国产业关系系统中四方主体的制度性困境,但却显示出企业层级的工会可能提升其能动性。这在以往的研究中常常被忽略,但对工人来说却是务实可行的有效途径。

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © SOAS University of London 2019

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Brown, Ronald C. 2006. “China's collective contract provisions: can collective negotiations embody collective bargaining?Duke Journal of Comparative & International Law 16, 3577.Google Scholar
Chan, Anita. 1993. “Revolution or corporatism? Workers and trade unions in post-Mao China.Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs 29, 3161.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chan, K. Chris. 2012. “Community-based organizations for migrant workers’ rights: the emergence of labour NGOs in China.Community Development Journal 48(1), 622.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chan, K. Chris, and Hui, Elaine S.. 2014. “The development of collective bargaining in China: from ‘collective bargaining by riot’ to ‘party state-led wage bargaining’.The China Quarterly 217, 221242.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chen, Feng. 2003. “Between the state and labour: the conflict of Chinese trade unions’ dual institutional identity.The China Quarterly 176, 1006–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chen, Feng. 2010. “Trade unions and the quadripartite interactions in strike settlement in China.The China Quarterly 201, 104124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chen, Feng, and Yang, Xuehui. 2017. “Movement-oriented labour NGOs in South China.China Information 31(2), 155175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, Simon, Lee, Chang Hee and Li, Qi. 2004. “Collective consultation and industrial relations in China.British Journal of Industrial Relations 42(2), 235254.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, Simon, and Pringle, Tim. 2009. “Can party-led trade unions represent their members?Post-Communist Economies 21(1), 85101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duan, Yi, and He, Yuancheng. 2015. “Quntixing laodong zhengyi beilun biankao” (Reflecting on the paradox of collective disputes). Human Resource Development of China 5, 9095.Google Scholar
Dunlop, John T. 1958. Industrial Relations Systems. New York: Henry Holt and Co.Google Scholar
Franceschini, Ivan. 2014. “Labour NGOs in China: a real force for political change?The China Quarterly 218, 474492.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedman, D. Eli. 2013. “Insurgency and institutionalization: the Polanyian countermovement and Chinese labor politics.Theory and Society 42(3), 295327.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Froissart, Chloé. 2018. “Negotiating authoritarianism and its limits: worker-led collective bargaining in Guangdong province.China Information 32(1), 2345.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guo, Yue. 2005. “Pingheng laodong guanxi: jianli zhenzheng de jiti tanpan zhidu” (Balancing labour relations: establishing a genuine collective bargaining system). China Labour 2, 2224.Google Scholar
He, Gaochao. 2011. “Nanhai bentian shijian yu Guangdong moshi, jiben tezheng yu yiyi” (Nanhai Honda and the Guangdong model, basic characteristics and significance). Internal and unpublished material from Nanhai Honda collective bargaining on-site meeting.Google Scholar
Howell, Jude A. 2008. “All-China Federation of Trades Unions beyond reform? The slow march of direct elections.The China Quarterly 196, 845863.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hui, Elaine S., and Chan, Chris K.. 2015. “Beyond the union-centred approach: a critical evaluation of recent trade union elections in China.British Journal of Industrial Relations 53(3), 601627.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuruvilla, S., and Zhang, H.. 2016. “Labour unrest and incipient collective bargaining in China.Management and Organizational Review 12(1), 159187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, Chang-Hee, Brown, William and Wen, Xiaoyi. 2016. “What sort of collective bargaining is emerging in China?British Journal of Industrial Relations 54(1), 214236.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, Chingkwan. 2007. Against the Law: Labor Protests in China's Rustbelt and Sunbelt. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Leung, Parry P. 2015. Labour Activists and the New Working Class in China. New York: Palgrave MacMillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liu, Mingwei. 2010. “Union organizing in China: still a monolithic labor movement?ILR Review 64(1), 3052.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Luethje, Boy, Luo, Siqi and Zhang, Hao. 2013. Beyond the Iron Rice Bowl: Regimes of Production and Industrial Relations in China. Frankfurt: Campus.Google Scholar
Luo, Siqi. 2013. Collective Bargaining and Changing Industrial Relations in China: Lessons from the US and Germany. Frankfurt: Peter Lang.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Luo, Siqi. 2017. “Agendas, alternatives, and collective labour law: a case of the local collective bargaining regulation in south China.Employee Relations 39(4), 541560.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pringle, Tim. 2011. Trade Unions in China: The Challenge of Labour Unrest. Abingdon: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Silver, Beverly. 2003. Forces of Labor. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, Bill, Chang, Kai and Li, Qi. 2003. Industrial Relations in China. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar PublishingGoogle Scholar
Thun, Eric. 2006. Changing Lanes in China: Foreign Direct Investment, Local Governments, and Auto Sector Development. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tilly, Charles. 1978. From Mobilization to Revolution. New York: Random HouseGoogle Scholar
Wen, Xiaoyi. 2014. “Guangdong gonghui zhixuan” (Direct union election in Guangdong). Open Times 5, 5465.Google Scholar
Wen, Xiaoyi, and Lin, Kevin. 2015. “Restructuring China's state corporatist industrial relations system: the Wenling experience.Journal of Contemporary China 24(94), 665683.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wright, E. Olin. 2000. “Working-class power, capitalist-class interests, and class compromise.” American Journal of Sociology 105(4), 9571002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wu, Qingjun. 2012. “Jiti xieshang yu guojia zhudao xiade laodong guanxi zhili(Collective consultation and state-led labour governance). Sociological Studies 3, 6688.Google Scholar
Xu, Xiaohong. 2004. Chongtu yu xietiao (Conflict and Coordination). Beijing: Labour and Social Security Publishing.Google Scholar
Yang, Tao. 2016. “Jiceng gonghui youxiao yunzuo jingyan tanxi” (Analysis of the grassroots trade unions's effective operation). Journal of China Institute of Industrial Relations 30(5), 3440.Google Scholar
Yang, Tao. 2018. “Sanwei yu yiti: Zhongguo gonghui ‘tese’ jiexi” (Three dimensions in one body: analysing Chinese trade unions’ “characteristics”). Chinese Annual Review of Political Science 7, 4765.Google Scholar
Zhang, Jun, and Jian, Liu. 2010. “Weile Zhongguo gongren de zunyan” (For the dignity of Chinese workers). Chinese Workers 6, 2632.Google Scholar
Zhang, Lu. 2014. Inside China's Automobile Factories: The Politics of Labor and Worker Resistance. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhou, Sigeng. 2014. “Gongzi jiti xieshang zai Guangdong” (Collective wage negotiation in Guangdong). Chinese Workers 3, 1320.Google Scholar