Internationalising industrial disputes: the case of the Maritime Union of Australia

Author:

Smith Caroline

Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to examine the capacity for trade unions to mobilise internationally by considering how stevedores in Australia successfully internationalised a major dispute.Design/methodology/approachThe paper reports the findings of a single case study of the “waterfront dispute” of 1998, an industrial dispute in the Australian stevedoring industry which included the mobilisation of unions internationally. This case study is one of the four cases in a PhD research project, which examined international trade union activity in the mining, manufacturing, banking and stevedoring industries. The methodology included semi‐structured interviews with trade union leaders and activists, as well as document analysis, and involved comparative analysis across the four case studies.FindingsAustralian stevedores or “wharfies” were well placed to mobilise internationally due to a combination of internal and external factors. In particular, the Maritime Union of Australia's long‐standing support for international causes, largely due to its left‐wing, internationalist politics, resulted in the union gaining significant support from unions internationally. Important external factors included the nature of the stevedoring industry, with its organic link to other industry sectors, combined with the neo‐liberal approach adopted in Australia which also influenced the internationalisation of the union campaign.Research limitations/implicationsThe study provides the opportunity to consider capacity for international mobilisation in the stevedoring industry and the contingent nature of international campaigns, with wider implications for union strategies in other industry sectors.Originality/valueThe paper contains an in‐depth analysis of a major dispute in the Australian stevedoring industry and makes a significant contribution to the expanding literature on the internationalisation of union campaigns and union strategy.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Industrial relations

Reference47 articles.

1. ACCC (1998a), ACCC Institutes Against Maritime Union of Australia, Press release, Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, available at: www.accc.gov.au/media/mr1998/mr89%2D98.html (accessed 27 August 2001).

2. ACCC (1998b), Waterfront Case Settled, Press release, Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, available at: www.accc.gov.au/media/mr1998/mr166%2D98.html.

3. Anner, M. (2003), “Industrial structure, the state, and ideology: shaping labor transnationalism in the Brazilian auto industry”, Social Science History, Vol. 27 No. 4, pp. 603‐34.

4. Ashwin, S. (2000), “International labour solidarity after the cold war”, in Cohen, R. and Rai, S. (Eds), Global Social Movements, The Athlone Press, London.

5. Briggs, C. (2001), “Australian exceptionalism: the role of trade unions in the emergence of enterprise bargaining”, The Journal of Industrial Relations, Vol. 43 No. 1, pp. 27‐43.

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