Are we experiencing new dynamics of
revolutionary change coming from the Global South? In his fascinating new book Southern Insurgency: The Coming of the Global Working
Class
(Pluto Press, 2015) Immanuel Ness looks more closely at the labour movements in
India, China and South Africa and their potential of resistance to exploitation.
In this post, I will give a brief glimpse at the book based on a presentation
given by Ness at the Five Leaves
Bookshop
in Nottingham/UK on 5 November.
Showing posts with label NUMSA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NUMSA. Show all posts
Sunday, 8 November 2015
Sunday, 13 April 2014
Trade Union Solidarity and Free Trade: The case of COSATU.
Do trade
unions matter in the Twenty-First Century? How are they responding to ongoing
processes of neoliberal restructuring? In particular, what obstacles do they
face in developing transnational solidarity against the rise of free trade?
What is clear is that national labour movements in different parts of the world
have, at times, responded differently to the deepening of trade liberalisation
in recent years. This is because the immediate impact they face differs
depending on their place within the structure of the global economy. In his new
academic article ‘The Congress of South African
Trade Unions and Free Trade: Obstacles to Transnational Solidarity’, which is part of a special
issue on Free Trade
and Transnational Labour, Stephen
Hurt explores these questions through a study of how the biggest trade
union federation in South Africa – the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU)
– has reacted to both multilateral and bilateral trade liberalisation.
Monday, 13 January 2014
NUMSA asserting its independence: showing the way for unions in Europe?
When I attended the Futures Commission
of SIGTUR in Johannesburg/South Africa, Nelson Mandela was already seriously
ill in hospital (see SIGTUR’s
Futures Commission and the search for alternatives in and beyond capitalism!).
Nonetheless, first voices of criticism were voiced by South African
representatives at the Commission meeting, arguing that Mandela had given in
too easily to demands by the white capitalist class. At the same time, his
figure as the father of the new South Africa prevented a more in-depth
discussion of his socio-economic legacy. As he has now passed away, could this
be the moment for a more serious discussion about South Africa’s socio-economic
future? The Declaration
by the National Union of Metal Workers of South Africa (NUMSA) adopted at its
special national congress, 17 to 20 December 2013, seems to suggest this. In
this blog post, I will discuss NUMSA’s Declaration and reflect on its
implications for European trade unions.
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