1. Introduction; 2. The democratic deficit of global supply chains; 3. Democratic representation: structures and claims; 4. After Rana Plaza: mending a toxic supply chain; 5. Representative alliances in the creation of the Bangladesh Accord; 6. Creating representation through industrial democracy vs. CSR: the Accord and Alliance as a natural experiment; 7. When transnational governance meets national actors: The politics of exclusion in the Bangladesh Accord; 8. Building representative structures at the workplace level; 9. Conclusions: the emergence of transnational industrial democracy?; Appendix 1. The practical and political issues of studying transnational labour representation; Appendix 2. When CSR meets industrial relations: reflections on doing interdisciplinary scholarship.
This book shows how the Rana Plaza disaster led to voluntary labour governance initiatives based on a model of transnational industrial democracy.
Juliane Reinecke is Professor of Management at Said Business School, University of Oxford. She is a Fellow at the Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership and Research Fellow at Cambridge Judge Business School, from where she received her Ph.D. Juliane's research focuses on transnational governance, collective action and multi-stakeholder collaboration, sustainability in organizations and in global value chains. She serves as Associate Editor of Academy of Management Journal and as a trustee of the Society for the Advancement of Management Studies (SAMS). Jimmy Donaghey is Professor of Human Resource Management at the University of South Australia, Australia. His main research interests focus on the effects of internationalisation on the employment relationship. He is an editor of the journal Work, Employment and Society. Aside from his academic interest in employment relations, Jimmy has been an active participant in industrial relations in both the UK, where he was a branch officer and national executive member of UCU for over fifteen years, and Australia, where he is currently branch secretary of the UniSA NTEU branch.
'Through their detailed empirical work on the ground in Bangladesh
and their thoughtful theorising on democratic representation, the
authors show that what seems like an unsolveable problem -
achieving better labour standards in the global garment industry -
hinges on one core ingredient: the voice of workers. Their book
sheds light on who can legitimately take up this role in the
absence of institutionalised structures of representation, taking
us through the complex and fragile alliances on different levels
that have emerged in the aftermath of the Rana Plaza disaster. A
great read for anyone interested in the intricacies of making
global supply chains more sustainable, be it from an industrial
relations, a governance or a management perspective.' Elke
Schüßler, Head of Institute of Organizational Science, Johannes
Kepler University Linz
'Workers have a right to stay alive at work. Unforgivably, it seems
that the global brands that now dominate the world economy only
'woke up' to this fundamental right when over a thousand workers
died in the Rana Plaza factory collapse. This book is a wake-up
call for everyone, from international agencies to national
governments, from producers to consumers. Reinecke and Donaghey
demonstrate how production and consumption relations have been
'disconnected' by global supply chains, and they make a compelling
democratic case for these relations to be 'stitched back together'.
Although the market-driven form of industrial democracy that
characterised the Accord ultimately fell short, this book is an
essential read for all those who are trying to stitch national and
international labour regulation back together.' Peter Turnbull,
Professor of Management & Industrial Relations, University of
Bristol, UK, and President, British Universities Industrial
Relations Association (BUIRA)
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