In a referendum
organised by students at the University of Nottingham, an overwhelming majority
of 96 per cent of participating students voted in favour of the University of
Nottingham Students’ Union (SU) to become a Living Wage employer and pay its
entire staff the Living Wage, as calculated by the Living Wage Foundation. In
this guest post, Ed Marks, one of the leading activists in the
referendum, reflects on the outcome.
Saturday, 22 July 2017
Friday, 7 July 2017
Fighting for Public Water in Europe.
The
first European Citizens’ Initiative (ECI) on ‘Water and Sanitation are a Human
Right’ was an enormous success. Between May 2012 and September 2013, an
alliance of trade unions, social movements and NGOs succeeded in collecting
close to 1.9 million signatures across the European Union (EU), thereby
reaching the required quota in 13 EU member states. In my open access article ‘Fighting for
public water: the first successful European Citizens’ Initiative, “Water and
Sanitation are a Human Right”’, recently published in the journal Interface: a journal for and about social
movements, I analyse the underlying dynamics of this struggle and its
impact on EU policy-making in detail.
In this blog post, I will discuss the
main factors underlying this success: 1) the long history of water struggles; 2) the unique quality of water; and 3) the broad alliance of participating
actors.