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THE TRANSNATIONALISM ROOTED IN PRODUCTION AND THE ‘PLACE’ OF THE GLOBAL UNION1 1 The authors acknowledge the work of the anonymous reviewers who helped to clarify the arguments of this text.

O TRANSNACIONALISMO ENRAIZADO NA PRODUÇÃO E O ‘LUGAR’ DA UNIÃO GLOBAL

Abstract

In recent years, the idea of “new labor internationalism” has inspired controversy. The concrete developments emphasized by this debate (the emergence of “global unionism”) combined new strategies and traditional forms of union organization, confusing the established frameworks. In search of the nature of these hybrid arrangements, we explore what lies behind the “invention” of the global union as a new type of union organization, noting how the ideas of rooted transnationalism and network organization offered partial solutions to conflicts that permeate the relations between corporate and union powers. In particular, we discuss the emergence of global agreements and union networks in transnational corporations in manufacturing industries, and their adoption in Brazil. Our conclusion is that although the institutionalization of global unions has been hitherto precarious and contested, it has coherently articulated seemingly contradictory principles. However, given these hesitant compromises and tentative foundations, a critical and multiscalar sensibility is vital to unraveling the significance of the transnational practices of trade unions today.

Keywords:
New labor internationalism; Global union; Rooted transnationalism; Global Framework Agreements; Trade union networks.

Resumo

Nos últimos anos, a tese do “novo internacionalismo operário” motivou importantes controvérsias. Os acontecimentos concretos enfatizados por esse debate (o surgimento do “sindicalismo global”) combinou novas estratégias e formas tradicionais de organização sindical, o que confundiu os enquadramentos estabelecidos. Em busca da natureza desses arranjos híbridos, exploramos o que há por trás da “invenção” do sindicato global como um novo tipo de entidades sindical, mostrando como as ideias de transnacionalismo enraizado e organização em rede ofereceram soluções parciais para conflitos que atravessam as relações entre poderes corporativos e sindicais. Especificamente, discutimos a emergência de acordos globais e redes sindicais em empresas transnacionais nas indústrias manufatureiras, e sua adoção no Brasil. A conclusão é que, ainda que a institucionalização dos novos sindicatos globais tenha sido até aqui precária e contestada, ela articulou de forma coerente elementos aparentemente contraditórios. Apesar disso, diante desses compromissos hesitantes e fundações incertas, uma sensibilidade crítica e multiescalar é vital para a compreensão das práticas transnacionais dos sindicatos nos dias de hoje.

Palavras-chave:
Novo internacionalismo operário; Sindicato global; Transnacionalismo enraizado; Acordos Marco globais; Redes sindicais

From the moment globalization emerged as an issue of public debate, civil society actors have been searching for transnational forms of collective organization with growing enthusiasm. A traditional approach, based on vertical and hierarchical representation structures, was displaced by the ideal of network organization, which guided the practice of “globally connected yet locally rooted social movements” (Juris, 2008Juris, Jeffrey. (2008). Networking Futures: the Movements against Corporate Globalization. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.: 14), envisioning the emergence of a “global politics of localized actors” (Sassen, 2004Sassen, Saskia. (2004). Local Actors in Global Politics. Current Sociology, 52/4, p. 649-670.: 662): a “rooted cosmopolitanism” of activists whose “most interesting characteristic is how they connect the local and the global” (Tarrow, 2005Tarrow, Sidney. (2005). The New Transnational Activism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.: 2). Thus, the distinctive mark of the new contemporary internationalisms was the conception of a deep-rooted transnationalism inspired by networked organization.

Unions were not immune to these inclinations but incorporated them with some particularities. By and large, studies on new internationalisms relegated labour movements to a lesser status, since they were usually perceived as incompatible with the logic of networks (Castells, 1999Castells, Manuel. (1999). A era da informação: economia, sociedade e cultura. O poder da identidade (Volume 2). São Paulo: Paz e Terra.: 424). In the early 2000s, while the internationalization of social movements had spurred extensive academic research, “international unionism continues to attract little interest outside labour activist circles” (Josselin, 2001Josselin, Daphné. (2001). Back to the Frontline? Trade Unions in a Global Age. In: Josselin, Daphné & Wallace, William. Non-State Actors in World Politics. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, p. 169-186.: 169). Gradually, however, this situation was challenged by scholars who saw the emergence of a “new labour internationalism” as an important component of union renewal processes in the context of globalization, a thesis that has sparked important controversies (Brookes & McCallum, 2017Brookes, Marissa & McCallum, Jamie. (2017). The New Global Labour Studies: a Critical Review. Global Labour Journal, 8/3, p. 201-218.).

This article approaches this topic in the light of recent theoretical trends and practical developments. The starting hypothesis is that trade unionism requires specific treatment since its structures were built with the historical sedimentation of legally protected and institutionally recognized prerogatives in different spheres, most notably by national labour rights, but also on an international scale. Despite the recent developments in this field, what is conventionally called ‘global unionism’ is the direct descendant of the ‘official’ or ‘institutional’ international unionism established more than a century ago. As Peter Evans noted, the global trade union movement articulates a complex set of local, national, and international powers, requiring the creative combination of hierarchical structures and networks (Evans, 2010Evans, Peter. (2010). Is it Labor’s Turn to Globalize? Twenty-first Century Opportunities and Strategic Responses. Global Labour Journal , 1/3, p. 352-379.).

In this article, we explore the ‘invention’ of the global union as a sui generis entity that, unlike national unions under usual circumstances, cannot rely on state guarantees to exercise its prerogatives. We argue that global unions have resorted to the principles of deep-rooted transnationalism and networked organization to mitigate the limitations of this situation. An important conclusion of the research, however, is that these principles were not always a goal in themselves. Rather, they represent the strategic adaptation of global unionism to a contested and shifting terrain, which led to introducing innovations that challenge traditional organizational logics while being closely associated with previously established structures of union representation.

Specifically, we investigate the development of global union policy on transnational corporations (TNCs) within IndustriALL Global Union - the larger global union dedicated to manufacturing sectors - and its predecessors in the chemical and metal industries (the ICEM and the IMF2 2 IMF: International Metalworkers’ Federation; ICEM: International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers’ Unions. , respectively). In this, a sociological approach focused on the elements of conflict that underlie the ‘social dialogue’ discourses adopted by global unions proved to be fruitful, allowing us to identify, in the primary sources, the ways in which the ultimately antagonistic nature of the relationship between unions and companies influenced the development of global unionism, whose powers currently navigate, to a great extent, the contested terrain created by union pressure on corporate governance procedures untouched by state supervision.

From this perspective, we analysed semi-structured interviews conducted with 52 interlocutors between 2014 and 2020. A first set of interviews covered promoters of global unionism as a broad union strategy to deal with TNCs. This batch included 4 advisors and 19 union officials (25 interviewees in total) distributed as follows: 11 IndustriALL, ICEM or IMF officials; 5 officials in other international unions; 3 in foreign union organizations; 6 in union centrals and metal or chemical workers’ confederations in Brazil. The second group, formed by 27 interviewees, included workers, workplace representatives, and local union officials who participated in union networks promoted by IndustriALL in specific companies. Additionally, we analysed relevant documents, such as congressional resolutions, bulletins, pamphlets, and other items for external dissemination, as well as internal records provided by various union organizations, such as meeting minutes, activity reports and communications. Union activities were also observed, from major IndustriALL congresses to smaller events, such as network meetings to address specific issues.

After briefly contextualizing the history of sectoral or industrial union bodies at the international level, in the first part of the article we analyse how these organizations found in the role of TNCs’ counterparts a path to reframe the relevance of their prerogatives. Based on the qualitative analysis of the material, focusing on the evidence on the global unionism promoters’ concerns, we seek to characterize two main elements: the arguments that supported the conception of the global union as a project for transforming international unionism, on the one hand, and the resistance to this proposal, on the other. In the second part of the article, we rely on data about IndustriALL’s activities and research evidence on the Brazilian case to assess how the global unionism model described by the research planted its roots.

THE “OLD” AND THE “NEW” TRADE UNION INTERNATIONALISM

When considering the theory produced on global unionism in recent years, the nature of the phenomenon is not always agreed upon. A first batch of scholarly research contrasted a diplomatic and bureaucratic internationalism with the network approach of engaged militants (Webster et al., 2008Webster, Eddie et al. (2008). Grounding globalization: labour in the age of insecurity. Oxford: Blackwell.), whereas a second approach prioritized the investigation of new forms of transnational labour regulation through the lens of Industrial Relations (Papadakis, 2011Papadakis, Konstantinos (org.). (2011). Shaping global industrial relations: the impact of international framework agreements. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan .). Nevertheless, the convergence regarding the practical experiences associated with new labour internationalism was remarkable. Notably, organizations that until recently had operated in relative obscurity were deemed central: the industrial or sectoral internationals, union bodies responsible for representing specific industries or professions at the international level, known today as Global Union Federations (GUFs). As McCallum (2013McCallum, Jamie. (2013). Global unions, local power: the new spirit of transnational labor organizing. Ithaca: Cornell University Press .: 5) highlighted, the search for concrete examples of labour internationalism in recent decades was hampered, among other reasons, by them not emerging from where it was conventionally expected; indeed, he says, “nearly all instances of labor transnationalism emerge from within individual GUFs.”

International trade unionism as we know it dates back to the transition between the 19th and 20th centuries, when two varieties of union internationals were conceived. In 1901, the International Federation of Trade Unions (IFTU) was founded3 3 The name was adopted in 1913. , the first of what would be a long lineage of ‘umbrella’ federations which, divided among ideological lines for most of the last century, would regain a certain level of political unity in the 1990s, in a process that led to the creation of the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) in 20064 4 In the literature about unionism in Brazil, it is known as the CSI (Confederação Sindical Internacional). . From the beginning, international bodies responsible for specific workers’ categories were also created (Stevis, 2020Stevis, Dimitris. (2020). Global Union Organisations, 1889-2019: The Weight of History and the Challenges of the Present. In: Bellucci, Stefano & Holger Weiss (orgs.). The Internationalisation of the Labour Question: ideological Antagonism, Workers’ Movements and the ILO since 1919. Cham: Springer, p. 23-49.). Originally known as International Trade Secretariats (ITSs), they were the GUFs precursors. Until 1914, about 30 organizations of this type emerged, such as the international associations of miners (1890), metalworkers (1893) and textile workers (1894) (Windmuller, 1991Windmuller, John P. (1991). International Trade Secretariats: the Industrial Trade Union Internationals. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Labor.: 1).

In general, trade secretariats were seen as subordinate appendages, bodies whose relevance was constrained by the ‘mundane’ concerns of specific groups. In the 1920s, for example, Lorwin (1929Lorwin, Lewis. (1929). Labor and internationalism. New York: Macmillan.: 99) considered that “the work of the Secretariats was narrow in scope and modest in results,” whereas a report for the US government concluded that the resolutions of the metalworkers’ international was devoid of “general interest” since they were limited to discussing “purely trade-union tactics and methods, which include the prevention of the importation of strike breakers, travel benefits, maintenance of a defense fund, and exchange of union data” (U.S. Department of Labor, 1920U.S. Department of Labor. (1920). Historical Survey of International Action Affecting Labor. Washington: Government Printing Office.: 77).

The kind of union strategy discussed in this article was first glimpsed in the second half of the century, when the emergence of multinational companies opened a new area of activity for trade secretariats. Since the 1960s, ‘world company councils’ started to appear, union bodies designed to coordinate collective bargaining within the same company across multiple countries (Levinson, 1972Levinson, Charles. (1972). International Trade Unionisn. London: George Allen & Unwin.). These councils were established in dozens of multinationals, notably in the chemical and metal industries5 5 Etty & Tudyka (1974: 388, apud Olle & Schoeller, 1977: 55) listed 34 councils, only 4 of them outside the sectors of the IMF and what would later become the ICEM. , but they fell short of the expectations of their creators who, guided by an “evolutionary optimism,” would have seen in the collective bargaining internationalization an inevitable consequence of the production internationalization, a prediction that was never fully realized (Ramsay, 1999Ramsay, Harvey. (1999). In Search of International Union Theory. In: Waddington, Jeremy (org.). Globalization: patterns of Labour Resistance. London: Mansell, p. 192-219.).

Nevertheless, as heirs of this experience, ITSs were well positioned to respond to what emerged as a central trade union concern in the context of globalization - the intensification of the production transnationalisation propelled by transnational corporations (TNCs). In this context, the sectoral internationals sought to strengthen their structures, accelerating the historical trend of reducing the number of organizations accompanied by expanding the representation basis of individual internationals (Bourque & Hennebert, 2011Bourque, Reynald & Hennebert, Marc-Antonin. (2011). The Transformation of International Trade Unionism in the Era of Globalization. Just Labour: a Canadian Journal of Work and Society, 17-18, p. 1-17.). Today, the largest GUFs each cover broad sectors of economic activity, such as public services, private services and manufacturing. In 2002, the name ‘trade secretariats’ was abandoned in favour of ‘Global Union Federations’ and, more recently, some GUFs started using the designation ‘global union’6 6 Strictly speaking, the name ‘global union’ is also claimed by other bodies. In this article, we use it as a synonym for Global Union Federation (GUF). .

IndustriALL Global Union is a typical example of this process. Able to trace its origins to organizations founded more than a century ago, it adopted its current form in 2012 and claims to speak on behalf of over 50 million workers in 140 countries, distributed throughout multiple branches of industrial manufacturing. It resulted from a merger between three important GUFs: ICEM, linked to the chemical, energy, and mining sectors; IMF, the traditional international association of metalworkers; and IGWTLF, then dedicated to workers in the textile and clothing industries7 7 ITGLWF: International Textile, Garment and Leather Workers’ Federation. .

GLOBAL AGREEMENTS AND DEEP-ROOTED TRANSNATIONALISM

Much like other GUFs, IndustriALL presented itself as a counterweight to large TNCs, a central element of the identity sought by the new global unions. Accordingly, the organizations that would form IndustriALL proposed the creation of a “powerful counterpart to transnational corporations” (IMF et al., 2011International Metalworkers’ Federation (IMF) et al. (2011). IMF, ICEM, ITGLWF Move Towards Creating a New International.). In its first resolutions, the new international decided that the merging federations would “combine their strengths and best traditions to create a global organization capable of challenging the power of multinational companies and negotiating with them on a global level” (IndustriALL, 2012aIndustriALL. (2012a). Action Plan of IndustriALL Global Union. Available on <Available on https://www.industriall-union.org/sites/default/files/uploads/documents/Action_Plan/industriall-action-plan-english.pdf >. Accessed on 18 Apr. 2023.
https://www.industriall-union.org/sites/...
). Indeed, regarding the interest sparked by global unionism, Global Framework Agreements (GFAs) signed between GUFs and TNCs would achieve an undeniably prominent position.

Although global agreements can be compared to collective bargaining, analysts have highlighted the particularities of these instruments, which are subordinated to a sphere of private governance8 8 “Private governance” refers to forms of corporate self-regulation, such as voluntary commitments and corporate social responsibility policies. McCallum (2013) speaks of “governance struggles” to refer to union incursions into this sphere. surrounded by uncertainties. The most common interpretation defines GFAs as a “union response to the social responsibility movement of corporations” (Hennebert, 2017Hennebert, Marc-Antonin. (2017). Os acordos-marco internacionais e as alianças sindicais internacionais: instrumentos de uma necessária transnacionalização da militância sindical. Sociologias, 19/45, p. 114-140.: 117) or, in stricter terms, as a direct evolution of ‘codes of conduct’, charters of principles published by large companies in response to international campaigns protesting labour, social, and environmental violations. What separates agreements from codes is that the former result from negotiation processes in which unions are recognized as legitimate signatory parties. Nevertheless, GFAs share important features with unilateral codes: they celebrate general principles (a ‘framework’) that, in most cases, have indeterminate temporal validity; are voluntary, that is, companies are not under an obligation to participate or to maintain this participation; finally, they are not directly enforceable, that is, they lack state guarantees for compliance with their provisions.

That global trade unionism privileged this sphere has frustrated certain expectations, not least due to GFAs being vulnerable to the criticism that they reinforce the privatization of international labour law (Thomas, 2011Thomas, Mark P. (2011). Global Industrial Relations? Framework Agreements and the Regulation of International Labor Standards. Labor Studies Journal , 36/2, p. 269-287.). Faced with this suspicion, much of the research on the subject has focused on searching for concrete evidence of the practical use of GFAs, which generally suggests conclusions that are difficult to generalize (Krause, 2018Krause, Rüdiger. (2018). The Promotion of Labour Standards Through International Framework Agreements. In: Gött, Henner (org.). Labour Standards in International Economic Law. Cham: Springer International Publishing, p. 319-339.). In this article, we present an alternative and complementary perspective. We argue that, notwithstanding the obvious relevance of evaluating the normative effectiveness of GFAs, a unilateral focus on this dimension may lose sight of the role played by codes of conduct in legitimizing the role to which the GUFs aspire.

An important aspect is that codes of conduct implied the unprecedented recognition by powerful companies that their operations could be subjected to global rules. Presenting themselves as the workers’ voice in the definition of these rules, GUFs emerged as candidates to embody a global union mandate that was previously absent. From the perspective of sectoral internationals that were traditionally relegated to a secondary role, the signing of global agreements was a momentous milestone that signalled the feasibility of this ambition. Thus, even when assuming apparently innocuous forms, GFAs boost the consolidation of global unionism in a broader sense. However, with formal recognition alone, global unions are still grasping at straws. Aware of the limitations that had hindered previous experiences, the GUFs proposed a profound reconsideration of the nature of international unionism and, thus, found in deep-rooted transnationalism a path to re-signify their sectoral vocation and defend the need for a new type of organization - the global union.

The global union in manufacturing industries

Among the federations that would create IndustriALL, it was the ICEM that first conceived the essential components of a global union in manufacturing sectors. In its first congress, in 1995, the organization argued that corporate power had eroded union influence over important decision-making processes, which could no longer be supervised by governments or parliaments, but were conducted “behind the boardroom doors of the major multinational companies” (ICEM, 1996International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers’ Unions (ICEM). (1996). Power and counterpower: the union response to global capital. London: Pluto Press.: 54). In practical terms, it demanded a “firmer definition” of the responsibilities associated with each of the two types of international union bodies (the secretariats and the “umbrella” federations), arguing that “it is sometimes forgotten that the international industrial federations are primarily organisations of industrial action, in fact industrial struggle, rather than political lobbyists” (ICEM, 1996International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers’ Unions (ICEM). (1996). Power and counterpower: the union response to global capital. London: Pluto Press.: 55).

Thus, a pioneering formulation of the affinity between industrial vocation and deep-rooted transnationalism appears. According to ICEM, sectoral internationals should be concerned “with building practical links between workers; with actual pay and conditions; with supporting actual industrial disputes; with the application of occupational safety and health protections in individual industries and global companies” (ICEM, 1996International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers’ Unions (ICEM). (1996). Power and counterpower: the union response to global capital. London: Pluto Press.: 60). This argument was fundamental for reconsidering the relevance of the GUFs’ sectoral attributions. Traditionally, the ‘minor’ day-to-day concerns of local unions had been out of the scope of a ‘diplomatic’ internationalism interested in more directly political and ideological issues or dedicated to lobbying in multilateral organizations. Through the lens of rooted transnationalism, however, these prerogatives started to be seen as an alternative to the ‘top-down’ approach of union diplomacy, a way of building initiatives “rooted in the day-to-day realities of members, and not the musings of remote international leaders” (Fairbrother & Hammer, 2005Fairbrother, Peter & Hammer, Nikolaus. (2005). Global Unions: Past Efforts and Future Prospects. Relations Industrielles, 60/3, p. 405-431.: 422).

In this model, deep-rooted transnationalism guides the creation of global union alliances that must be able to engage companies directly, which would justify, in turn, strengthening the GUFs as ‘union counterparts’. It was no accident that ICEM mentioned global agreements as an “example of what can be achieved” (ICEM, 1996International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers’ Unions (ICEM). (1996). Power and counterpower: the union response to global capital. London: Pluto Press.: 58). Platzer et al. (2011Platzer, Hans-Wolfgang et al. (2011). Global and European trade union federations: a handbook and analysis of transnational trade union organizations and policies. Bern: Peter Lang.: 195) noted that in this period “the field of company-related activity has seen a qualitative strengthening in the functional profile of the federation,” which they associated with the development of a “strategic perspective” aimed at building the necessary conditions to the exercise of “the genuine function of a ‘trade union’,” that is, “to become an actor at the global-transnational level capable to ‘negotiate and agree’” (Platzer et al., 2011Platzer, Hans-Wolfgang et al. (2011). Global and European trade union federations: a handbook and analysis of transnational trade union organizations and policies. Bern: Peter Lang.: 191). The later use of the name ‘global union’, therefore, was not incidental or without purpose.

This trend has been followed by other GUFs, but it has not gone unchallenged. The metalworkers’ international decided to support codes of conduct in 1997, and, according to the organization, “it was clear from the outset that such codes were to be negotiated and would become agreements between the IMF and transnational corporations” (IMF, 2006International Metalworkers’ Federation (IMF). (2006). Background to International Framework Agreements in the IMF.: 2). A few years later, however, the federation would notice that companies were reluctant to accept it as a signatory party, a role they preferred to grant to unions in their home countries. The IMF’s recommendations, consequently, were insistent on the federation’s role in global agreements: “IMF should be involved from the start;” “An IMF officer or designee must sign the IFA [International Framework Agreement];” the agreement “should be negotiated by IMF and management at global level” (IMF, 2006International Metalworkers’ Federation (IMF). (2006). Background to International Framework Agreements in the IMF.: 2). These determinations confirm the hypothesis that GFAs were important to legitimize the position of global unions. In the words of the general secretary of the IMF at that time, global agreements would serve to “create an IMF identity” (IMF, 2003International Metalworkers’ Federation (IMF). (2003). Report of the Secretariat to the Central Committee of the IMF.: 18). Along the same lines, when asked about the importance of these agreements, a director of IndustriALL stated that “in the first place, it guarantees the recognition of unions at a global level, to the Global Union Federations at large” (interview, 2014).

Today, the role of the GUFs is well accepted among unions engaged in global unionism, which is the subject of the next section. Corporate resistance, however, is more persistent. The International Organization of Employers, which presents itself as “the global voice of business,” states it “takes no formal position for or against” GFAs, but warns affiliates that “this is not a Corporate Social Responsibility initiative” and that, even if their “legal status is untested,” global agreements should be treated as contracts “of a legal nature” (IOE, 2013International Organisation of Employers (IOE). (2013). Fact Sheet for Business: International Framework Agreements (IFAs). London: IOE .). On the other hand, the organization acknowledges that companies, unlike trade unions, prefer to see GFAs “principally as a mechanism for deepening dialogue, first and foremost, and not as an industrial relations exercise” (IOE, 2007International Organisation of Employers (IOE). (2007). International Framework Agreements: an employers’ guide. London: IOE.: 8).

When it comes to analysing concrete labour conflicts within specific companies, considering both corporate strategies and the organization of production is necessary. Ramalho & Santos (2018Ramalho, José Ricardo & Santos, Rodrigo Salles Pereira dos. (2018). Trabalho e ação sindical em Redes Globais de Produção. Tempo Social, 30/1, p. 9-29.: 25) highlighted the complexity of the interactions between workers’ agency and the transformations in global production networks, proposing “a relational understanding of the conformation of networked corporate strategies and of a deeply stratified working class, resulting in more complex conditions of consent and resistance.” Juravich (2007), in turn, detailed how unions can use research to obtain information about corporate structures and use them strategically. This was an alluring prospect for global unions and ICEM proposed that building “overall knowledge of the company’s production, strategies, industrial relations policies and collective bargaining” would offer “a convincing demonstration that an industrial trade union international is not a remote bureaucracy, but an essential provider of data and information for concrete, day-to-day union work” (ICEM, 2005: 56).

The GFAs must be understood within this context. The fundamental thing is that union incursions into the field of “corporate governance,” across different scales, suggest an attempt to establish some degree of public regulation over spaces that escape democratic oversight. Therefore, this always involves a dimension of conflict, and Stevis (2009Stevis, Dimitris. (2009). International Framework Agreements and Global Social Dialogue: lessons from the Daimler Case. Geneva: ILO.) was correct when he defined GFAs as a “battleground” between unions and companies. This contested nature is precisely what allows us to reconsider the significance of the mandate claimed by the GUFs, which cannot be reduced to a rearrangement of representation powers previously held by other union bodies.

Usually, a company is expected to carry out truly global strategies, but public regulations, and unions, are constrained to local or national jurisdictions. Unlike other movements, to which the “global” may appear as a diffuse phenomenon, in the case of unions facing TNCs, corporate decision centres correspond to global authorities that can be targeted directly. This is why deep-rooted transnationalism can articulate principles that, from a traditional perspective, would be seen as incompatible, namely, local union demands and international organization.

The old world company councils proposed something similar, but their weaknesses, and the recent transformations in the organization of production, made global unions seek more fluid arrangements, capable of matching corporations networked organization. In this regard, it is relevant that large companies offer not only global counterparts, but also a cartography for global union alliances. In essence, the idea that there is a “latent union strength” (ICEM, 1996International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers’ Unions (ICEM). (1996). Power and counterpower: the union response to global capital. London: Pluto Press.: 56) embedded in the global production disposition qualifies the meaning attributed to GFAs. As with universal declarations of rights, these agreements establish an abstract global jurisdiction, but, unlike them, they also demarcate specific constituencies - the workers under the authority of the same company in determinate localities, a group that could, potentially, organize itself and make itself represented at the global level.

From this perspective, the GFAs limitations stem not from union naivety regarding codes of conduct or the corporate social responsibility shortcomings, but from the fact that their formal scope is not always accompanied by a strong enough organizational basis9 9 This is the position of the leader responsible for signing the first global agreement, which occurred in the food sector, who criticized the association of GFAs with corporate social responsibility and argued that the “original intention” of the policy was based on the collective bargaining strategy developed by the International Trade Secretariats (Gallin, 2008). . In the words of a Brazilian metalworkers’ union official, “the limit of the Framework Agreement is that it will only have life, effectiveness, with union action supporting it; without a union defending that, the company will not comply” (interview, 2014). Another interviewee, from the chemical sector, considered that “for the agreement to be functional, it must have a union network alongside it. Which should come first, the network or the agreement? The network. It will raise issues, demand that the agreement has certain features” (interview, 2014). It is no coincidence that IndustriALL referred to global agreements and union networks, in tandem, as its “Way Forward for the Future” (IndustriALL, 2012bIndustriALL. (2012b). IndustriALL Global Union’s Conference on Global Framework Agreements and Trade Union Networks: “Review of Experiences and Way Forward for the Future”.).

UNION STRUCTURES AND NETWORK ORGANIZATION

Deep-rooted transnationalism suggested that international unionism “may be refigured away from vertical representation toward the coordination and management of a network of trade unionists stretching across the global economy” (Wills, 1998Wills, Jane. (1998). Taking on the CosmoCorps? Experiments in Transnational Labor Organization. Economic Geography, 74/2, p. 111-130.: 127). Such concerns are relevant to global unionists, but considering the position occupied by the GUFs in representation structures is important since, even when the name ‘global union’ is adopted, these entities cannot discard federative structures completely. After all, GUFs are financed by national unions that define their priorities and elect their officials.

Direct recruitment of workers is possible, but rare, usually limited to situations where union representation in not established in a territory. Not only would the resources available to the GUFs be insufficient to support sustained efforts in this direction, but local unions would likely protest the usurpation of their attributions. As summarized by Garver et al. (2007Garver, Paul et al. (2007). Global Labor Organizing in Theory and Practice. Labor Studies Journal, 32/3, p. 237-256.: 239), “GUFs, which have affiliated unions rather than direct members, must rely on those affiliates for democratic legitimization and for organizing local actions.” Global unionism, therefore, has long been operating as a cooperation between diversed union organizations, an approach that favoured adopting the idea of networked organization.

Union networks in manufacturing industries

The ICEM’s foundational propositions emphasized the need for union action to be “planned on an international basis right from the start” (ICEM, 1996International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers’ Unions (ICEM). (1996). Power and counterpower: the union response to global capital. London: Pluto Press.: 55), which could suggest a priority to the organization’s global mandate. In reality, however, its resolutions conveyed a more realistic compromise. The international recognized that “the power of any union structure resides in its local branches,” criticised a “centralising view” and argued that union strategies should be carried out as “a series of networks” (ICEM, 1996International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers’ Unions (ICEM). (1996). Power and counterpower: the union response to global capital. London: Pluto Press.: 56). Guided by its broader goals, ICEM focused on the creation of ‘company networks’, structures that should operate with the permanent communication between the international and ‘union correspondents’ in the factories of a single company in multiple localities. The contours of such networks were not precisely defined at first, but it was suggested from the beginning that these structures should not be limited to information exchange, that is, they should also support joint initiatives, enabling globally unified strategies to face TNCs.

In the second ICEM congress, in 1999, the organization’s leadership assessed the networks that had been created up to that point in a positive light and determined that the “exchange of strategic information links previously separate groups of workers,” which would have provided “a firm basis for solidarity” (ICEM, 1999International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers’ Unions (ICEM). (1999). Facing Global Power: strategies for Global Unionism. In: Second World Congress, Durban.). About ten years later, the IMF had established general recommendations that, if not to be read as a rigid model, illustrate what should be expected from networks in traditional manufacturing industries. Eager to set up alliances capable of negotiating with TNCs, the international highlighted the need to reach the “real decision-makers within the enterprises” and proposed to recognise the “political mandate” claimed by networks that would, therefore, speak on behalf of participating unions when addressing the company (IMF, 2010International Metalworkers’ Federation (IMF). (2010). IMF Guidelines on Trade Union Networks in TNCs.: 2). The compromise was the definition that “each union itself decides over who participates or not in the networks,” although it was added that, in doing so, they should recognize “the importance of representation and participation from the shop floor” (IMF, 2010International Metalworkers’ Federation (IMF). (2010). IMF Guidelines on Trade Union Networks in TNCs.: 3). Likewise, it was agreed that unions would encourage the participation of representatives from the workplace, but that was followed by the guarantee that this would happen “according to the practices in the respective countries” (IMF, 2010International Metalworkers’ Federation (IMF). (2010). IMF Guidelines on Trade Union Networks in TNCs.: 4).

In essence, what this means is that local arrangements should not be disturbed. This decision meant networks would have to live with possible inconveniences, such as union officials vetoing the participation of local political minorities, but, on the other hand, it greatly expanded the possibilities of a global unionism whose range of action would be very limited if it could only rely on structures directly controlled by the GUFs. Here, instead of taking on the mantle of a ‘proper union’ in the usual sense, the global union appears as a mediator or facilitator, allowing networks to take advantage of a wide array of union structures, each playing a strategic role: national unions lend their mandates over certain jurisdictions; the union in the company’s home country engages the corporation’s central management; workplace representatives and organization are mobilized to connect networks to workers in factories.

IndustriALL reaffirmed these principles in its “Charter of Solidarity,” a document that regulates the affiliated unions’ responsibilities and the global union’s “mandate” regarding, among other things, union networks and global agreements. Deep-rooted transnationalism is celebrated with the provision that “affiliated unions will seek to ensure that member activists and representatives are fully involved” (IndustriALL, 2012cIndustriALL. (2012c). IndustriALL Global Union’s Charter of Solidarity in Confronting Corporate Violations of Fundamental Rights. Available on <Available on https://www.industriall-union.org/sites/default/files/uploads/documents/EXCO2013/Charter/industriall_charter_of_solidarity_english.pdf >. Accessed on 18 Apr. 2023.
https://www.industriall-union.org/sites/...
), but the ambiguous wording to refer to the participants of this movement (member activists, which in the Spanish version is indicatively translated simply as sindicalistas, i.e. ‘unionists’) highlights the tension that permeates the exercise of a mandate that depends on the voluntary cooperation of autonomous entities.

Finally, here too global trade unionism accommodates apparently divergent principles. Hierarchical trade union powers established at the local and national levels are reasserted within the network, thus what we have called “deep rooting,” in this case, includes workers only indirectly. This approach is guided, on the one hand, by the ambition of building translocal connections capable of supporting a global policy to confront TNCs and, on the other, by the need to disarm conflicts with local unions, that is, by peaceful coexistence with established unions’ powers, who might see the emergence of global unions as a threat. In this process, global unionism is both benefited and constrained by integration with pre-existing union structures.

GLOBAL UNIONISM IN PRACTICE

The previous sections identified the fundamental elements of a global unionism project whose apparently contradictory provisions reveal their coherence in negotiated arrangements that made the conception of the global union possible in the absence of state guarantees to the exercise of a representative mandate. In practice, the solutions presented so far mitigate tensions, but do not eliminate them completely, which means that institutionalizing the global union is still a hesitant and contested process.

Regarding relations with TNCs, the clearest evidence of the limits of this compromise is that most GFAs were established in companies headquartered in Europe10 10 Hadwiger (2018: 26) estimated the participation of European companies in the total number of GFAs in different sectors at more than 80%, even though the presence of companies from other regions jumped from 7% in 2005 to 18% in 2016. . In the case of IndustriALL, only 4 agreements out of 46 were signed by companies based outside the European Union and the United Kingdom (this group represents 91% of the GFAs signed by the organization). Aware of this bias, IndustriALL sought to boost initiatives in other regions. Analysis of the organization’s action plans reveals a more balanced picture that is closer to the regional distribution of the headquarters of large TNCs in the studied sectors11 11 The most recent IndustriALL Action Plans in sectors formerly covered by ICEM and IMF, approved at global conferences held between 2014 and 2019, were analyzed. The documents prioritized 80 companies, 4 of them with dual regional affiliation. The regional distribution of companies is based on the report published by UNCTAD (2019) on the top 100 TNCs (70 of which are in selected industries). , with targeted companies coming from Europe (63% of prioritized companies, compared to 59% among large companies in relevant industries), the United States (17% compared to 20%) and Asia (10% to 19%). Also note the activity in companies of Latin American (6%) and African origin (2%), which are not represented among the largest companies in the selected industries.

Despite these efforts, regional imbalances in global trade unionism also result from the historical importance of European unions within the GUFs, whose federative structures are vulnerable to national influences. About ICEM, Cumbers et al. (2008Cumbers, Andy et al. (2008). Labour Agency and Union Positionalities in Global Production Networks. Journal of Economic Geography, 8/3, p. 369-387.: 376) argued that the organization was not “a coherent movement as such but rather a coalition of diverse labour interests, differentiated on spatial, ideological and sectoral grounds.” This situation was detailed in the years following its foundational congress by an important leader in the federation, who reported that “in the 1990s, the attempt was to make the networks work from plant to plant, despite the fear, if we can put it this way, from national union organizations. That was always the tension, that was the real problem” (interview, 2020).

Initially, the international’s leadership used networks to defy the union bureaucracies’ influence more directly, which was facilitated by the influx of new potential allies (unions and workers in Eastern Europe and the Americas, for example). According to the interviewee, however, the conflict deepened when ICEM explored building networks with a higher degree of autonomy, seeking alternative means of funding, and promoting spaces of articulation beyond the supervision of federative structures, a step that was deemed unacceptable by members that were critical of the organization’s early policies. After its second congress, ICEM’s proposals were moderated, which prevented a break with important financial supporters.

If replacing them entirely is impossible, an alternative could be democratizing federative structures. IndustriALL has set itself the goal of promoting greater participation by unions from the Global South and permanent offices have been set up in Uruguay, South Africa, Russia, India, and Singapore. The organization’s second congress took place in Rio de Janeiro, in 2016, when a Brazilian metalworker was elected to the position of General Secretary. The third congress was planned to take place in Cape Town (South Africa), but it was carried out in a virtual environment due to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, since the GUFs do not directly control networks, adjusting federative powers may not be enough to counterbalance the influence of unions with greater financial resources, which often fund global initiatives directly (Cotton & Gumbrell-McCormick, 2012Cotton, Elizabeth & Gumbrell-McCormick, Rebecca. (2012). Global Unions as Imperfect Multilateral Organizations: An International Relations Perspective. Economic and Industrial Democracy, 33/4, p. 707-728.). Without losing sight of these difficulties, the study of union networks in Brazil reveals that the global unionism model described so far allows even apparently weak local unions to influence the practical implementation of global policies.

Deep-rooted global unionism in Brazil

In a comparative study, Galhera (2016) indicated that, contrary to what happened in the steel industry in Brazil, in the apparel and clothing sectors, deep rooting of union networks was blocked, which suggests that the model discussed in this article cannot always be immediately transported to other sectors. In the chemical and metal industries, however, global unionism found fertile soil in the country. Rombaldi & Tomizaki (2017Rombaldi, Maurício & Tomizaki, Kimi. (2017). Ultrapassando fronteiras: trajetórias de ascensão de militantes brasileiros no sindicalismo transnacional. Sociologias , 19/45, p. 24-50.) demonstrated that, although this wasn’t a likely path for most union officials, metalworkers’ leaders from Brazil achieved prominent positions at IndustriALL; until recently a Brazilian metalworker occupied the prestigious office of General Secretary. The study by Hélio da Costa (2016Costa, Hélio da. (2016). Responsabilidade Social Empresarial e sindicalismo no contexto da globalização. Tese de Doutorado. PPGS/Universidade de São Paulo.), in turn, analyzed the union network at BASF, a giant in the chemical sector, and revealed the wealth of international cooperation experiences involving Brazilian leaders in the chemical industry, both before and after the advent of global unions.

In sum, Brazilian participation in the development of global unionism was not exclusively an external determination, that is, local unions benefited from a previous union internationalism tradition and advantages that characterise few categories of workers in the country. Nevertheless, even among chemical and metal workers, the relative precariousness of the average local union compared with the global unionism irradiation centres, especially during the initial development of the studied policies, is attested by the fact that the diffusion of union networks in Brazil was primarily funded by foreign unions interested in knowing and influencing the global operation of companies headquartered in their countries12 12 The main foreign funders of the networks in Brazil were the Dutch Federatie Nederlandse Vakbeweging (FNV), the German Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund (DGB), and the Solidarity Center, linked to the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO). .

However, since global unionism depends on the voluntary cooperation of local representatives, the latter preserve the capacity or, at least, the legitimacy to represent workers in their jurisdictions, which means that they have been able to negotiate the terms of their incorporation into global initiatives that, if considered unfair or ineffective, could simply be ignored or abandoned, which would close the networks’ access to relevant territories.

A German trade unionist interviewed for the research, for example, lamented that Brazilian allies usually send a different representative to each international meeting, making it difficult for the networks to operate consistently (interview, 2014). From the local perspective, however, rotating representatives is important to preserve good relations between unions, and thus the practice has been maintained. This situation reveals an unforeseen consequence of the dependence on established union powers - local structures may constrain networks, sometimes controversially, but they can also protect global initiatives from capture by powerful national funders, which favours the GUFs’ mediating role.

In Brazil, the presence of formally neutral global bodies signalled that networks were not an exclusive policy of the Central Única dos Trabalhadores (CUT), the first union organization to engage with global unionism in the country, which facilitated the participation of unions linked to other political factions13 13 In the sectors covered by the research, unions linked to CUT and Força Sindical are affiliated to IndustriALL. Recently, UGT also approached the international. In the regular activities of networks in Brazil, however, unions linked to other trade unions, such as CTB and Intersindical, are also present. . In a broader sense, the GUFs’ sectoral vocation makes alliances possible even in the absence of strict ideological affinities, since issues connected to daily union work are shared by local representatives. Moreover, the GUFs offer purportedly democratic instances that can be questioned. During a meeting of chemical unionists in São Paulo in 2016, for example, a local representative criticized the negotiations of a global agreement, centralized in Europe, for ignoring local demands. At the time, the leader stated that, if IndustriALL did not address their concerns, the matter would be taken to the press. This situation shows that there are disagreements, but also that local unions see global unionism as a realm that should be claimed and contested, not ignored.

The articulation of local unions in Brazil within a network dealing with a chemical company headquartered in the Netherlands illustrates how these trends manifest themselves in practice. A Brazilian trade unionist noted that the initiative came from the Dutch trade union federation, “a project from the [unions in the] Netherlands, which wanted to know the regional particularities of the parent company, not only in Brazil, but also in other places” (interview, 2018). Meetings between local representatives from different factories in Brazil began to be organized in 2001. At the same time, arrangements were made so that local officials could travel to the company’s global headquarters. The interviewee reported that, at that time, he held the position of “factory safety commissioner”14 14 Cipeiro, a worker elected to the Internal Commission for the Prevention of Accidents (CIPA). and did not know the factories operated by the company in Brazil besides his own: “The first time, I ended up using the network. I was new, I didn’t know better. So, we presented the demands of [the factory in] São Bernardo to the global CEO” (interview, 2014). As contacts grew stronger, however, local priorities gave way to unified campaigns: “Knowing the realities and the inequality that existed [in the company] in the country, involving the distribution of bonuses, wages, benefits, we thought… ‘so, how can a company wearing the same shirt have this difference in benefits?’… We started to create almost a single agenda” (interview, 2018).

As in the case of similar networks, national criteria were considered more realistic in formulating concrete demands, but international contacts were essential. The interviewee valued the support of the Dutch who, according to him, “always helped a lot,” particularly in exerting pressure on the company’s central management. He highlighted that solidarity also flowed in the opposite direction. When Dutch workers were fired from the company in 2008, Brazilians stopped local production in protest: “We stopped for two hours at the units in Mauá, São Bernardo, and Recife… that had a lot of repercussions. What does the Netherlands have to do with Brazil here? They are workers, we are in solidarity with them too. They are in difficulty, but they wear the same shirt” (interview, 2018). In this sense, the existence of territorially separated workers ‘wearing the same shirt’, that is, linked to the same company, is the direct justification for the existence of networks.

With the ICEM’s support and, later, IndustriALL, Brazilian trade unionists took the initiative to expand the alliance to other countries in the region where the company was present: they visited Mexico in 2009; Argentina, in 2012 and 2013; and Colombia, in 2016. In this process, trade unionists from different locations pressured the company into taking part in annual ‘social dialogue rounds’, bargaining tables that occurred at the national and, on some occasions, regional level. Note that, although the company in question has refused to sign a global agreement, these spaces operate with a logic that is very similar to the one behind GFAs. Unions frame the idea of a ‘dialogue’ in terms of collective bargaining and mobilize workers to demand compliance and the progressive institutionalization of what they perceive as negotiated deals, whereas the company prefers to limit these practices to an exercise of social responsibility and sharing of ideas. This indicates that the global union policy that support GFAs can produce arrangements that, despite being much less visible to outsiders, can be just as relevant to the practical consolidation of global unionism.

Finally, the contact of local unionists with global unionism opens up the possibility of establishing alliances beyond company-based cooperation. These processes are intertwined, which reinforces the suggestion that global unionism can influence union practices in a broader sense, even when its role is not immediately perceptible. In the words of a trade unionist who was part of a union network in another European company in the chemical sector:

IndustriALL holds a [company network] meeting in Denmark. Since we are there, we talk to these unions and propose: we want to get to know you, how the union works. We also want them to come to Brazil and we close an agreement. We have an agreement with Turkey that we signed in 2009 at an IndustriALL meeting - then ICEM - and it’s going very well. We went there and they came here several times… With the French too. Recently, the [company] got mad at us. As we gain agility with international information, and in the case of the [company] it has European origin… [if] an accident happens here, you put it in an email and everyone knows about it. There the relationship is different. Here, to get to the industrial manager, one goes through a lot of people. There, no, they have a direct relationship if someone needs to make a complaint. Quite often, thanks to what we release to them, from there comes a message to the factory, and the factory [manager] gets upset. (interview, 2014)

These experiences demonstrate that what at first glance may appear as local or binational events are in fact intimately linked to the emergence of global unionism. The global union does not control these initiatives but enables a practice that is at once transnational, rooted, and multiscalar. Seemingly trivial local demands, such as an incidental dissatisfaction of workers in a given factory, fuel a strategy that unfolds across multiple scales: foreign unions’ influence over global executives is mobilized to challenge the despotism of local bosses; translocal contacts favour the emergence of joint demands and campaigns; organization in the workplace, whose greatest weapon is the strike, is used to boost national and transnational campaigns. Finally, communication technologies allow these alliances to be mobilized continuously. In the words of a metalworker unionist, “online, we exchange information simultaneously. It’s right by the machinery, you can hear the guy cutting metal sheet there” (interview, 2014). In this way, deep-rooted transnationalism moves away from the kind of international trade unionism that is located “at the peak of a pyramidal structure several removes - and gatekeepers - away from any flesh-and-blood workers” (Waterman, 2001Waterman, Peter. (2001). Trade Union Internationalism in the Age of Seattle. Antipode, 33/3, p. 312-336.: 315).

CONCLUSION: THE “PLACE” OF THE GLOBAL UNION

In the midst of the internationalist enthusiasm that marked the emergence of global unions, Richard Hyman considered that international unionism continued to be constituted by national organizations and questioned whether it would be an “extension of national experience, or whether in key respects it can be regarded as a distinctive social phenomenon.” He suggested that we inquire how far the ‘balance’ between international and national trade unionism had been shifted; whether new forms of action were created or whether they would be ‘borrowed’ from national experience; if there is an ‘ideology’ and a ‘discourse’ that are “not necessarily rooted in national trade union practice” (Hyman, 2005Hyman, Richard. (2005). Shifting Dynamics in International Trade Unionism: Agitation, Organisation, Bureaucracy, Diplomacy. Labor History, 46/2, p. 137-154.: 138). Our results reveal that these questions could be turned on their heads. In the cases described in this article, in the end, global unionism, if sometimes begrudgingly, asserts its relevance not by its separation, but, on the contrary, due to its ability to closely connect with local unions, that is, by the local rooting of global policies.

In fact, the dichotomy between the local and the global and the attempts to overcome it were prominent in the theoretical debates around new labour internationalism. Michael Burawoy (2010Burawoy, Michael. (2010). From Polanyi to Pollyanna: The False Optimism of Global Labor Studies. Global Labour Journal , 1/2, p. 301-313.), in what was the best-known critique of this idea, accurately identified conceptual difficulties that continue to challenge researchers, but also advanced an essentially empirical argument. According to him, when one looks at the concrete experiences that would link workers to this new internationalism, “there’s simply no there there,” an expression that, with a polysemic trick, suggests the absence of a real place occupying the space opened up by imagination. Essentially, struggles would still be tied to the local, refuting the internationalist mirage. The relevance of Burawoy’s broader arguments notwithstanding, the strongest counterpoints to his critique emphasized the permeability between scales and levels of action, which would disavow a dichotomous opposition. Along these lines, Lambert (2010Lambert, Rob. (2010). Unionism in One Country is no Longer an Option. A Response to Michael Burawoy’s ‘From Polanyi to Pollyanna: The False Optimism of Global Labour Studies’ (GLJ 1.2). Global Labour Journal , 1/3, p. 388-392.: 389) argued that Burawoy “misses the significance of a new conception of globalizing the local, namely, its construction through a networked linkage between local places across geographic space.”

When they are separated from the underlying developments that support them, such statements can sound overly abstract or even enigmatic. Our research, however, agrees with the conclusion that this is not an exclusively theoretical issue. In fact, in the case of global unionism, the challenge of devising strategies capable of crossing local, national, and global jurisdictions is presented in a very practical manner. It shouldn’t be surprising, then, that the experiences presented in this article have often confused unionists themselves, who are accustomed to navigating well-defined hierarchies, authorities, and territorial jurisdictions. What is the place of networks in trade union structures? In the words of an IndustriALL director, “when we talk about networks, they don’t fit well with our traditional union structures. We have local unions, regional unions, union delegates, union offices… Now we are talking about another structure that is not located somewhere. We want to include everyone. Local people, regional people, national people…” (interview, 2014).

This approach poses important challenges to research on the transnational practices of current trade unionism. Above all, multiscalarity must also be an analytical sensibility. This becomes clear, for instance, when researchers are faced with situations in which, to defuse conflicts with established unions, GUFs deliberately step out of the spotlight. When this happens, the network and the global union seem to ‘disappear’ amid translocal contacts, and their policies maybe be described as mere tools at the disposal of established unions. As another IndustriALL leader argued, “the network should not compete with the traditional union. The network is a tool that the union has to link different factories. This is how the union should see the network: as the sound-car, as the website…” (interview, 2014). This may seem deeply underwhelming to the untrained eye, and in this article we have ventured to argue otherwise.

We have acknowledged, on the other hand, that the dependence on existing structures imposes significant constraints, a crucial point when it comes to the ability to reach different categories of workers, especially those that currently lack local representation. Thus, Cotton & Croucher (2009Croucher, Richard & Cotton, Elizabeth. (2009). Global Unions, Global Business: Global Union Federations and International Business. London: Middlesex University Press.: 119) advocated abandoning the emphasis on collective bargaining, a policy that would prioritize established categories, but championed the “political decision” to dedicate greater resources to global unions, “the only institutions that can develop the collective experience, articulation and collaboration between unions in the ways demanded by globalisation.” Van der Linden (2016Van der Linden, Marcel. (2016). Global Labour: A Not-so-grand Finale and Perhaps a new Beginning. Global Labour Journal , 7/2, p. 201-210.) agreed with criticising strategies focused on collective bargaining and considered that the global unions would be better prepared to organize broad groups of workers, suggesting that they should bypass outdated local bureaucracies.

Our conclusions indicate that the importance of collective bargaining for global unions should not be so easily dismissed. It was precisely due to the GUFs assuming a role in the relationship between the “us” of the workers and the “them” of TNCs that deep-rooted transnationalism could emerge as an alternative to diplomatic federalism, and collective bargaining was fundamental in this regard. Nevertheless, we can concede that, having secured a relatively safe domain over their prerogatives, global unions are now much less dependent on GFAs to legitimize their claims. Notably, coexistence with pre-existing union powers, initially an imposition of the circumstances, is increasingly perceived as a virtue. Global unions seem most promising not when they attempt to assert their authority over a global mandate, although that might be beneficial at times, but when they focus on their expertise as weavers of union strategies across multiple scales, becoming “intermediaries or facilitators in multi-scalar initiatives” (Ford & Gillan, 2015Ford, Michele & Gillan, Michael. (2015). The Global Union Federations in International Industrial Relations: A Critical Review. Journal of Industrial Relations, 57/3, p. 456-475.: 14).

The prospects of this vision are tied to the fortunes of the unions on which it relies. Searching for the origins of the global union, we focused on industries in which it emerged relatively early. The GFAs and union networks have spread to other sectors and, in contexts where local unions are not as well established, there may be more room for introducing new practices (McCallum, 2013McCallum, Jamie. (2013). Global unions, local power: the new spirit of transnational labor organizing. Ithaca: Cornell University Press .). Moreover, we cannot rule out the possibility that other movements will challenge established structures more directly in the future. However, this is not the inclination of the kind of global unionism described in this article. The GUFs are rarely willing to do so, and would usually lack the resources to effectively pursue this. Global unions can provoke local unions, but not replace them. From an analytical point of view, this means that the necessary counterpart to multiscalar sensibility is a realistic assessment of the inherent limitations of global unionism, which should not be conceptualized as an autonomous force. Ultimately, understanding global unions means understanding trade unions, nothing else.

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  • 1
    The authors acknowledge the work of the anonymous reviewers who helped to clarify the arguments of this text.
  • 2
    IMF: International Metalworkers’ Federation; ICEM: International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers’ Unions.
  • 3
    The name was adopted in 1913.
  • 4
    In the literature about unionism in Brazil, it is known as the CSI (Confederação Sindical Internacional).
  • 5
    Etty & Tudyka (1974: 388, apud Olle & Schoeller, 1977Olle, Werner & Schoeller, Wolfgang. (1977). World Market Competition and Restrictions upon International Trade-Union Policies. Capital & Class, 1/2, p. 56-75.: 55) listed 34 councils, only 4 of them outside the sectors of the IMF and what would later become the ICEM.
  • 6
    Strictly speaking, the name ‘global union’ is also claimed by other bodies. In this article, we use it as a synonym for Global Union Federation (GUF).
  • 7
    ITGLWF: International Textile, Garment and Leather Workers’ Federation.
  • 8
    “Private governance” refers to forms of corporate self-regulation, such as voluntary commitments and corporate social responsibility policies. McCallum (2013)McCallum, Jamie. (2013). Global unions, local power: the new spirit of transnational labor organizing. Ithaca: Cornell University Press . speaks of “governance struggles” to refer to union incursions into this sphere.
  • 9
    This is the position of the leader responsible for signing the first global agreement, which occurred in the food sector, who criticized the association of GFAs with corporate social responsibility and argued that the “original intention” of the policy was based on the collective bargaining strategy developed by the International Trade Secretariats (Gallin, 2008Gallin, Dan. (2008). International framework agreements: a reassessment. In: Papadakis, Konstantinos (org.). Cross-Border Social Dialogue and Agreements: an Emerging Global Industrial Relations Framework? Geneva: International Labor Office, p. 15-41.).
  • 10
    Hadwiger (2018Hadwiger, Felix. (2018). Contracting International Employee Participation: global Framework Agreements. Cham, Switzerland: Springer.: 26) estimated the participation of European companies in the total number of GFAs in different sectors at more than 80%, even though the presence of companies from other regions jumped from 7% in 2005 to 18% in 2016.
  • 11
    The most recent IndustriALL Action Plans in sectors formerly covered by ICEM and IMF, approved at global conferences held between 2014 and 2019, were analyzed. The documents prioritized 80 companies, 4 of them with dual regional affiliation. The regional distribution of companies is based on the report published by UNCTAD (2019)United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). (2019). World Investment Report 2019. Geneva: UNCTAD. on the top 100 TNCs (70 of which are in selected industries).
  • 12
    The main foreign funders of the networks in Brazil were the Dutch Federatie Nederlandse Vakbeweging (FNV), the German Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund (DGB), and the Solidarity Center, linked to the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO).
  • 13
    In the sectors covered by the research, unions linked to CUT and Força Sindical are affiliated to IndustriALL. Recently, UGT also approached the international. In the regular activities of networks in Brazil, however, unions linked to other trade unions, such as CTB and Intersindical, are also present.
  • 14
    Cipeiro, a worker elected to the Internal Commission for the Prevention of Accidents (CIPA).

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    02 June 2023
  • Date of issue
    2023

History

  • Received
    30 July 2020
  • Reviewed
    27 Nov 2021
  • Accepted
    18 Jan 2022
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