Spillover Effects across Transnational Industrial Relations Agreements: The Potential and Limits of Collective Action in Global Supply Chains

Author:

Ashwin SarahORCID,Oka Chikako,Schuessler Elke,Alexander Rachel,Lohmeyer Nora1

Affiliation:

1. Sarah Ashwin is Professor of Comparative Employment Relations in the Department of Management, London School of Economics. Chikako Oka is a Lecturer in the School of Business and Management, Royal Holloway, University of London. Elke Schuessler is Professor of Business Administration and head of the Institute of Organisation Science, Johannes Kepler University. Rachel Alexander is Research Officer in the Department of Management, London School of Economics. Nora Lohmeyer is Assistant Professor in the...

Abstract

Using qualitative data from interviews with multiple respondents in 45 garment brands and retailers, as well as respondents from unions and other stakeholders, the authors analyze the emergence of the Action Collaboration Transformation (ACT) living wages initiative. They ask how the inter-firm coordination and firm–union cooperation demanded by a multi-firm transnational industrial relations agreement (TIRA) developed. Synthesizing insights from the industrial relations and private governance literatures along with recent collective action theory, they identify a new pathway for the emergence of multi-firm TIRAs based on common group understandings, positive experiences of interaction, and trust. The central finding is that existing union-inclusive governance initiatives provided a platform from which spillover effects developed, facilitating the formation of new TIRAs. The authors contribute a new mapping of labor governance approaches on the dimensions of inter-firm coordination and labor inclusiveness, foregrounding socialization dynamics as a basis for collective action and problematizing the limited scalability of this mode of institutional emergence.

Funder

Volkswagen Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Management of Technology and Innovation,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Strategy and Management

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